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If VOLUME XLI1. COLUMBUS, OELTO, TUESDAY, AUGUSK, 1852, NUMBER 52. lUcdiln Oljto Stale Journal I- l'lrilLtfUKD AT C0LUM1IUS EVEIlY TUESDAY MORNING. SCOTT ft BABCOM, JOUHSAl, BIILDIM1D, Hlltll AND VRAM BTftttTU INTRAWC1 OX U1UII. TFIINS hi i wf'flfc'v ti'htttir : Tn rohunbiis, 2.00 a yenr j hv mail, SIWI; 1 1 ilbs of four and uustnrd, tfl.l&j of leu andHp-war.!-. SI IN). THE DAILY .lOtlltNAI.UfurnhhiiU Ut city unlwrilewat SC.OO, ami lt inml nt Ji.isin vi iir. I NK T'ltl-WKCKI.Y '.luUKXAI. Is S3 00 r year. HATES nKJDVKKTtSINO AT TlfF. WEF.K I. Y J 0 UliNA L 3 Jj t i S i I a E a : i 1 wi tin re, ol ;y w 4 uju wis oi '1 i(Urtn, "r 1 lift 1 1 tit OH OU& WH1 WH Wt'l'J. ir. 8Nuarrs, ,1 0(1 1 7f2 WH 60 5 00 G W8 Will. 17. A Ntpinrvs, 1 'iVJ 253 l (Wo Outi WH UOll). 14. i ; weekly ; I siimr, ' i column, I'v colninu, II coluniu, chiui ical ilo monthly, &'20n yenr ; t'tiHiip'iiniu mini lei iv .. . rliuiiui-nlilfl ijimvli'i'ly. , , diiiutfi'iitilu ipiartprly, . . luO. 10 linen of Hit slrd type Is reckoned n mmtv. Advertisements ordered on ttiu Itihklo rxohiivrl v, tlnuWo the nbove rale. All Jpailfil noticm charred double, hihI nieiwired a if solid. (Original Sketch,. For the Ohio Rati) Journal. TnE SOLDIER'S RETURN. AN INCIDKMT OF TUB " 11I.ACK-H A WK " WAR. II Y J . W . It. li lt my heart! t-alh was before tun! 1 fell his icy I nnd lliu dirt udhesive, when tho dry ashes are tn he tout-li, and liml given ut to die. Then 1 thought of j ymi ami L(ir child, mil begun to bewail ymir hnph-as 1 condition. In the midst of my diires, nml white pilenuslv lamenting my hiu! file, noticed a sympathizing cnunietiinco above mo, from which two eye lull of compassion beamed upou me. Tlit-n a voire spoke won In of comfort nnd hope. In a moment, us if by magic, 1 fell new life i prit'fl ii witliin nio, TIhti' whs ono mull, at Irani, who ft-urcd lnt llui dodtrnycr wlio hi'iuvntiiit!y mimttU'ri'd lit tliti elliich'd, klo wnh jui'h, nml looki'd woiii ilnwn, mid wm niulor tlio inllu-ifiif'B of tlio Hcour(M, toil ' ho went idmnt doini; jnod," Hpi'iiking conif.Tt, intiiriii liojio, 11 saw hiu words liiid ..iul ittct in my cnxe, und (or ludl anlioiirlio studd l y me, nit u iniiiif.tc! iij,' hiijji'I wIi,ro jireHHticu wiih mi iinlidi'tt uuiitHt tin- d HCiim1. I kmiw I fthotild g well, from lliu iDHiiP'iit lie left me. I did do; hut I h:dl iii'Vit, mrer liirfjul Hint imhle, gniennid, devout ifimi who (t:v il mu Trem deulh !" And tl'til you know him 1 " " I did ; it wai (Ii-nopd WiNPiKt.n Scott, Iho iuohi huiiiaiio muii living ! " " (ind ldtpHHiid rewind liim ! Oil, liow I idiniilil likti tn tlmlik liiin, nnd pour out the gnititudo nf toy ln-url for th'ot lmiiinin 1 " Sli.mlil ihifl nkiMcli f ill midur the iiniito of iho par- lies, lltny will pleiino ifxrime thin liliorly wo lmv tidu'i), iiuint'fl boing Hliidiuiisly tmud d in llio uairnlivo Vcivicitltural. Nn country in Hdi'T in liKtorirnl incidentn ihan i.t the Went, Ohio iiful her sister Sirttcw, where hiive ux-t the while nnd ml iiicii in dendly Rlrilo, and whero the R'irriii;j nnil !m lliu;,' m-oipM ol iioiii''r lilu lmvo been minuting lor Mm lu-t ihreo-rotirtlit of ti century. And nevt'r h i tlicro been w;iutioj; th il renily, srlf ciici ilic tug p;itrioii-m, from Iho t illicit tti'llli-nu'llt t-f tr country down in the jm-mit. tliy, whit'li nloi i nble, out til n wilderiK-PH wt.i.io, to buiid up roiouiuuiiics ninl S'niet. Twenty yeurii n!o lli ctdihrated Hlvck Hawk, ni I he bend of Iim lmli.ni forroft, bxviine en-in-'cd in lio-tilit en with the while. IilinoiH vv,,r thi n lite border Slule, nnd Mi" " brunl t f iho b illle " fell upon her ; but it Wai nppii ln'iirlcd by the ( iivtriimeot of the United Shi'i't Mint ti gi iieinl conlrder.iL'y of 'lie Indifiri Iribt'H, uhi. h whm li-lii'vnl lo be I'ontf tnpliiteil, would eiiiiltlo (lit1 ciierny to brini! into in lion n 1' iii f;d nrmv of warriorn, lit-l-no whom the i!l-tivp;iivil nml thinly fctth'd inliiibilantt nf tlio t-xpoiicd tctrilory would be driven nwuy or tuunb-red. I'n'b-r lh-no j ihius t ir-ctimKluuccH the 'iVi-rliiiM'iit C int liliout for II xiiihible h'Hilcr. In tjdto cbari'o ot Iho op- mMoiiH of (he finny in I tli nt nunrter. (o'nend Srott inn ruiini'iitly the iniiii lor the ci M4, find he wns necordiniMy n lo coiiiiiihimI llie troops mid t'onduet Iho wnr. (if lln- leinhtig events Connor ted widi the ' iiu;k-Hiiwk Wjif " we ithnll uy notli'm;;. They nr nmlterK id" geiiorid history, to which lluj lender ii referred, ltut in nil eiirh Iiiih k lln-ii' nro under -current nf event not iiVHtiti(l on ttie preiit purl' mj wlii. h wh behold, wliieh, neverihe-less, lire deeply iiiteri'iitjiifj, und tend ninii' ihrn tiny ihili' tl-e loebicid;iti c''nnier, mid develop tlio reul b elinyi nnd emotioiH id" the lienit. U( ourli on incident we write. The nliirui Ind been mug out, the c;il niide, und buiidn dtt ol cilizniN were prepuriu' to ui:irth to the Kceiio of dnnpvr mid of conllict, to d buttle for their hoincB, I heir wives, children, friends and country. Never Inn our gn nl und lorioun tiition Incited for defender in the hour of trial ninl poitl ! Never inny he ! (n Iheir Western home n newly nuittied couple, with (ino little child, Were nturtled by Iho wnr-'-ry. The hiifdntud i.iw iho need Id couutrv hnd of defenders, nnd the rniiiut wi hmd between )iitriotiiirii and tlio enjoyment of hi pleiiKiint lire Hide, nnd tho com-pHlitnnNliip of hia beloved mid ithdii'd wife nnd child. Hut the fierce Htrupgtn wa nt hint ended in hi bosom, by deciding to ihi what he believed lo be hi duty, nnd lenving iho event lo Providence. Ho would r,n to defend hix rininlry ; bul how wouid ho break the new to hi wife? for w. II ho knew how sorely lier heart would be troubled ul lliu uiilloilliretnejtt of hi deter-ininalioii to "go out in the bultle." It tnunt be doii(!, however, mid in the hi nt milliner ho kin-w how, tin ditlictill mid deinite tank win performed. She wept hitler h ur, nnd entreated liim to remm'n nt home, lo prelect lier nnd (heir lielple child henrt wan totirln it hy her distre and nluioit ho wns perninded to nhmdon hi inlention. Tll'-n ciiino the ill. ini'lit that if he did no, very mioii, it mi;dit be, he would have to f;ice the aviK;ii I'oo there, hy hi own heart h, ut Iih own homo, where In dent one won also be export d to their inw ilcoH vengemice, while now ho could iiu el ihein tivvay on oilier ground, whero hiuifielf alone would luivo lo nland belore the dinger, whilo thoe who Iny no near hi heart would bo mile These ('oiiHidornti'in entiibliHlied hi resolution a limt formed. Me retmniied I h "Til over lo hi companion. comlortrd her n far n her leelin:; would nduiit nf comfort, Iniilo her nn iillertinmitu mid teHrfol Rilieii, and departed ! Oh, how mitioutly Mint tender wife find mother nought for int'-lligeiico from the nro no of conflict! How every teporl d' danger or of buttle Idled lit r heart with dread nnd fear ! Mi-ivinc, dark nod har rowing, kepi her mind in a tnle of coiuiimnl drond. filling it with every rottceivnble thought of ovil nnd niinforluiie whielm f. veied imnjiinnlion could cnll into being! At lenglh enme tho new of iho great bnltlo of the Had Axe, mid of the in let y of hor dunhaml. She fell nn her knee mid Mmnked iiod for his inen ibd gooil lieRd ! Hut, ilia for human fortune! her joy wn of limited duration, nnd cut tdioi! in it.t hill mid ovuill.iwuig tide A lew day puiMt'd nwny, nnd Mm now came that (he pt'ntileiu'o, fur mere dreaded than tho enemy, bad routed, like lb nveu h blighting mildew, iiioii iho rank of noble, mid brave nitn,o recently victoriou in their ciamlry' cnue. Tenor spread on hII ide nt the ap proach of the uiioueii foe, whnott deadly Mtroke laid the brnvesl in llioihitt, ng tiimt whoso atlnck (hern wiih no defence, and from whose relentlu; purNiitt there wn no escape. Deulh n ined supreme ami the cur- niv.il went on on on! n though Mie iusntiato mnnsler would iifrfr he Matilii'd ! I Alone with her child nt tho wife, in an ugoiiy of Bilspento nml fear, mixioti nml still d reading lo hour from tho ubdent one, when suddenly hr oliiudo wiih broken in upon by tin aciuuiutaiict; jut front die army, who, in great notation tit what ho had seen, and very deBirou to lleo nn fir uwny from tho iufectioiiciiiii ni possiblo, merely pinised tn any " Your huniuind is thjinfl iritft the cholera" nnd Imntuned etV, a if in tho hope of getting beyond the reach of thodi Hirnyer, the roar of which drove him onward. Who ihfill inenfiiire tho anguish nf Out tenth r wife, a tho awful truth fell thus heavily upon her heart! Who shall paint the agony she endured, as she pressed her child to liar heart in iho tuidt of I hut more than midnight darkness from which hope had juttt lied while Iho burning eyes refined the tear which relieve the oven barged heart! There she sal training tho little one to her bosom, in which despair hnd taken ii it home, a hope expired! The first thought wiih h followed the nlmniing ht ck, Was, that who would hni- ten to the scene of deulh, and have a Inst look at the remnin id' her husband. Hut friend opposed tho measure, and iho tlmu;ilit of leaving her child, or of being taken from it and leaving it unprotected in the world, influenced bur to stay whero "hewn. Her grief at last found tear to give it utterance, and she wept a only such enn woep. Time passed. Kmm the Ohio Cultivntnr. A PLAN FOR DRVINO FRUIT. 1 have a house eix feet Bquure mid seven feet hi mi, with a ti'Mit Hour; ut bottom nnd tun the Iratne is mudeul' Bcantline-uhout three iiu'lies snuare.with tliroe im.-dn on each side ; these threo aide nonat have inch hulen thrtute;h them nix inches npurt, trotn uottuiu lo top, to receive hnch puis, eighteen or twenty inciies Jony;, to sustain the Hhulven con- lainiii"; the fruit. Tlie slielvcs used arc half inch Imardri, live feet ten inches loiifr, and ten incla'H wide, with tlie corners ut eacli end a little rounded: so that they may he laken out or put in handily. Two of these boards lie on one rtume of pins oni' boanl id' twenty inches would tin, hut, is nit her heavy when tilled with green fruit. A door two feet wide nnd seven foot, hifjli ia about, ri'ht lot it bf! in the centre of one end: it is then convc nt to Htnnii outside and slip in the shelves filled witli fruit, either to the ri'Mit or left. A tnnal stovo placed in the centre completes the fixture, except a covering lo the buildiny;, which may be auaciieo 10 it, or tt separate concern. Any ttirtner who has n Uderahle sutinlv of snriidit- ly buys or jjirla, can in one nitrht, from dark (ill bed lime, prepare enoiii'h Innt to cover all the shelv in the house just described, which will make more than a bushel of dried fruit; and twenty-loin hours is Ktilhctent to dry it cuinplolclv, by keeping up n iiindfrnlo (ire in (lie stove. The temperature in the dry Imuse tdiould be nhout 15ow Fahrenheit which is ensilv niaintained if the house is ti'dit. About threo hundred feet of well seasoned bounh will suliice for the whole concern, which should In toiifjued and grooved. A workman can make it in two or three days, und when once made, an swers fur many Important purposes besides drying truit; and it insects tire likely to trouble your dried peaches or apples in the spring of the year, remove them to the dry house, and subject them tu a heat ol iibout l.M)" tor several hours, and it wi lli'ctuully remedy the evil. Mioajam T. Johnson. A MODEL FARM, NEAR GENEVA. N. Y. ti. id and uiei'utiK'uate Rat llie mother, weeping over her child, n it lay unconscious ol misery on her lap, when she was aroused from hor stupor hy a rap at Iho door. Hbo. opened it, and in a moment was cnlolded in her husband's arm ! Oh, llie joy of that unexpected meeting ! who hall tell it 7 They wept ! but now they wore tears of hlins of exquisite huppinens! So soon at language could bo comuiHiidud, she inquired, " How in ihi t I heard ymi wore dead ! " I " Not quite, ihnnk Heaven and tho best mini living ! " How so? What mean you? " " Sit down and I will toll you." " I was indeed near unto death. Fear, terror, dread wer aa powerful an the pestilence by which I was acked. I mw ttiv couinauiutii fall ins aniund me on ill tldefl. I saw the aur aeons were bafllnd. Bml hnnn The eilitnr of tho jmlon tiiHivntor, tSaufnid How- iird, Kmi., iu hi recent fsote by Mm Hy." ol a visit to several percoii in the Statu ot iow York, lhu speaks d llie luriii of Mr. John JuhiiMon. ol S neca couuiy: Coiitiguoiia to tho bum ot Mr. Helidield is ilia' of Mr. John Johnston. Our rendei will recollect the late mention Mr. J. iu connection with Iho nuhieet of ilrairiJigo. Since In report to tho NttiUi Auriculturnl iety wn liindo, an extract front which aooenretl in n late number of this paper, he ha laid down on hit tiirm upwnnl ot II). Hull tllet, tii iltnig, in the whole. tpwmil ot 1(1(1,0(1(1, ex l end i eg lo an tiLreruie leneMi of more (ban twenty milea, I litxl not liau the oiiportuuitv ol oxmuiiimif Mr. JolitiHtoti's farm for four or live year, nnd I wa mix- inn 1 " Mm ellecia of the tyteni of tJrtiinage mi which ho bad (hen junt l.iirly entered. They have been all that tile inont Hiniuiue could have anticipated. Mr. . I. ' leading crop i wheat. When he, made hi piin liiiBe of u part of bit present farm, it was regarded by mnuy, nnd even by Iho lurnmr owner, a worn eui, d ' lit lor liollnng but white benus." Mi fnt crop watt of coiirso cniupamtively huh. He saw that the muin dillieulty was want of drniunire. Tin cailwi-d Mie grniti to " li'ei'e out,'' and pin ked the soil n hard as a sun-burnt brick. Ho commenced dramiiiL', and hi Dutch neighbor commenced laughing at linn. Haying Mint hi crop would ho "nil dried up before it was half grown. 1 hey weru amacdlbat the result was directly opposite from their expectation; but did not fail to nolo the iiuliivorablo coiitraU which their own cnum presented w hen compared wiih Mioso produced on Mr. JoIminIoii h ilianietl laud, Tim advatilaecM of draining have Hot been confined to tho wheat crop, but have been very conspicuous iu other crops, not excepting clover and griiMs, which art more luxuriant nnd nutrition in many iuHtimces I alter draining Minn they wero before. His wheat crop, ol which lit lln generally from sixty lo eighty ai re in a ytinr, ua aveitiyeti iiurly to llui iv-tive, mnh-' In lo tho acre. Thin v ear, when much complaint is in in I e nf wheat having " Iroen mil," mid of tho weevil, or wbeal-niiilgo having greatly injured il, hi crop will, according to tho estimation of the best jud;.ea, live ti!o over tbiriy tumheU to the acre. Then) wn no " free- OIK tint hero every irratu sown vegetnled, und every plant bore il proper quota The field weie so oven ill yio.d Unit little or no ddleience could he snen in the different parts. One field comprised nhout two acre of land wnicli never till this year produced n crop of any kind it had only borne coarse, sour water grasses. It w.i drained laxl year and sown to wheal in autumn, in connection wiih the rent of the field. It Im produced Hiic.h a crop a I never before taw. and a ftiunhir !iiliiiixi'in bill been made hy all who havtt seen it, a i ii no tr whom are Novcral of the best wheat farineiti in New Voik. I have heard no one estimate the j i, Id of this pnrl of llie field ut lesi than bl'ty biubels to the acre, and il in generally said, " if there wn tin midgu tu it, it would reach sixty bushel to the acre." lint tho ini-lgo In not in in led Mr. Johnston' wheat near as mueh a.-t it ha that on many oilier farm iu this secuoii, lino in ih exemption, Mr. ,l. say, i attritnitnole to tlraining. The explanation i clear ami satislnctorv. It is known thai the em best winter wheat is leant subject to the attack of tlio midge; hence, Iho Meditenn- neaii Variety which ia very early, is often adopted where this insert prevails. K.oly wheat reaches a stage, in which il is not attacked by the time tho mide liiaUea its appearance. In coiMcoumice d Mr. John ston's wheat being on drained land, it ntarted early and made rapid progress to maturity, gaining threo or four da) stiver whtMt nn idmilur land undrmned and this tune was sullicient to fqvo tho crop from serious damuL'e. It would bo wrong, however, to say Mutt Mr. John-1 ston'n great success in producing wheat and oilier crops is wholly owing tn dunning. His method of cultivation in very thorough In all rotpect. Hi soil i naturally quite teuaciou, which in hii opinion render fullovvim; expedient for wheal. Ho plow deep, mid works the soil lo a lint tilth, II general plan combine' both stock-feeding nml grain-growing. This i tlm true system, and I may say i tho only one by which the fertility of the suit can be permanently sustained. Mr. J. ha formerly kept sheep, tn lliu number of l.diii) or I, -'nn, but lately ha reduced his llock in l.'iO, substituting cat tie iu (heir place. He fallens the entile chielly in winter, lie tin Ixtlened 8 ! head since Inst fall. His practice i to buy a hl of three or lour yenr old cattle in November or Heceinber. and turn llietii otf to fat iii February j (hen put up another lot which are only moderately fed till m'tif is ready lo luru them (in, when their feeding nt the burn i dis continued, and by gnu only Mm anioui1 lire soon ready lor llie butt lier. He ha just Mild seventeen I lend id' 3 and I year olds, not yet driven away, for $4 per hundred, live wei-ht thy lot averaging l.MKI pound each. It will rem lily bo seen that by ihi system, Mr. Johnston provide himself with hii'e ipinntitie of rich manure. This i applied chielly to the Indian corn crop, of which Do ruiNOi every year a lame quantity, which conttitutcii the principal material in fattening hi stock. His larm i all the lime growing licher, nml Inn crops better, and yet he says ho bus never bought hiiv ma. mire, nor ul lale years any material to make it. There are many points in bin nutuageiuont which I ret; ird ns particularly judicious, and concerning which 1 tdmll have occa-ioti to speak hereafter. Hi lixtonnfor slull feeding nro decidedly Iho bent I have ever seen. provided, 1 here are two causes lor poultry liecoming lousy poverty and I'MMi. The lirl must of course be rema ned oy providing a oecenr supply ol loon; lor me second we bavo prescribed. The dry nhe or dry lirt will not adhere, to them; ami tho former, in par ticular, ii calculated to remove filth by natural cleansing powers, nt least in every rain. Wo once aw a hen that had nearly ot all her feathers, nnd whne carcass was a densely inhabited an Mm ('hinesn terri tory, divested ol her whole population iu a week, ami anew crop of feather started, by placing within her reach the ash bath, which lm improved uccottling to hor own (ante and inclination. otisinef in poultry, utiles soon eradicated, will crow into greater and moro serious evil. From hen they procoed to calves, and from calves tn older stuck, until at last each of the farmer' animal become n world over which they scatter and multiply, nnd prey ; while poverty and haggard look seize on their victim, nnd evil consequences arise which only cloao and long 'untitled care can relieve. There in no stock which pays no good a percentage on the capital invested a fowls. Attention, that great requisite to success m all kinds ol huHine, is, liowev r, essential in this: and mt m proportion mh this l bestowed, will its advantage be realized. Your, truly, v. it. YVlow, Loom, nnd Anvil. GERMAN AGRICULTURE. The nccoiint given hy Mr. Hewitt of German agricul ture cannot fail to interest our reader. He Hays: Each German Itus his house, bis garden, hi londsiili tree, so laden with fruit that if he did not carefully prop up anil tie together, aed in many places hold the briugha together with wooden clamp, they would Im torn asunder hy their own weiutit. Ho has Ins corn- plot, his plot o t rnnncl-wiirtzel, or a hedge for potatoes, for hemp, &c. Ho i his own mnkT, ami lie, there- lore, and every branch ol Ins fiunly, hive Mie strong oat motive liir constant exertion. V.ui eo (he ctleel o, Mr in hi industry mid his economy. In Germany noliiiug in lost. The luo.Iiiro of tin l roes and the cows i carried to market : much fruit, in dried lor winter use. You see it lying in the mi n ury. i on see string ot Tiiein linnging iri-in itioir chamher windows in ihe sun. I he cows are kept up lor me greiter part ot Iho year, ami cveiy green tlno is collected for ih-'tii. livery lilllo nook whero Me grass grows, by rond-ide, nnd river and brook, i cart! fully cut Willi ihoHiekle.mid carried home on tlio heads ol the women and children iu ha-tkets, or lied iu hu g clolli. Nothing of nuy kind Muilcan ponnibly be mail ol nny use is tost; weeds, iionlcN, nay, the very goiiMi L-rat-s which covers tho waste places, i cut and laken for Mm ciiWH. You e the little children standing iu iliostreeiBot tlie village, iu the stream which generally run down them, huy windiing tln-. e weed be. fore Miey are given to the cattle. Thev carefully collect Mitt leaves of the marh gras, carefully cut their potato lops for them, and oven if other thing fid, gather green leaves from tlm wood hmd. Ouo cannot help thinking continually of Ihe etioruinii wuMo of such thing! in Knylaiid of the vast quantities of giass on bunk, by roiuUide, in the opening of plantations, in I linen, iu chuieh-v nrtU, where grass from year In year spring nnd di', but which, il mtohilly cut, would maintain many thousand ctiwH lor Mie poor. Tu purine hI ill further this subject of (Jeriniiti economy. Tli" very cntiingH of the vinea are dried and preserved for winter lodder. Tho top mid reluso of hemp nerve a bedding lor the cows; nay, even the roiij'h Mtidk-t of tlm poppies, after Mm heuds have been gathered lor oil, are saved, ami all these arc converted into manure for Mm land. When lhe-,e are not sulli-cienl, til" t hildien are si lit iulo tlio woods to gather mo, nnd nil our render familiar wiMj (urmany will rcinemlier to have eeu them coining homeward Willi large Iniinllenor Mil on their bead. In autumn, tho lulling h aves are gathered and Marked f r Ihe name purp'He. ' ho lir cone, which with u lie and rid in tlm woods, mo caretully collected and sold lor lighting fires. In short, tlm economy and care of the German pens-i it mi example lo all Kurope. '1'hey have for years, nay ages, been doing Mint, ns regard agru idiiiial ninn- meiit, to which Mm HrilMi public is but just now beginning to open it eye. Time, also, in as carefully economized a everything eUe. They nro early risers. a may well bo conceived when the children, many id whom co mo trotn n considerable distniice, nro in school ut six in the morning. Ah they (end their callle or tin ir swine, the knitting never ceased, and hence the qimu lily of htoi kim.'s ami other lii'ii-ehold lliini; which th'-y act uiiitihiio i a"loni hhing. ilarictn. THE CHURCH AND THE TAVERN. II Y I.AUH1K Tout), In the yenr 17JK1, when Lou. in iho Sixteenth was be headed, and the French Uovolution was in full blast, I wn a thorough going radical. With seventeen more it our club, i wa marched under lif t, guard ol tlie king's nllicers. and lodged in Kdinburg !inil. After a nummary hearing 1 got liberty to banish mvself, mid accordingly 1 took passage in tlmgoed slup I rovideuce, I and landed ut New York in June, I7!M. i wa then iu my Iwenty-second yenr. When the ship cast off fnnn 1 the wliart, in rvcothiiul, and swung ronmi with (he breeze, my father Niod upon the shorn. He waved a Innt adieu, and rxelnimod, " Renteinber the Satibalh lay." 1 arrived at New York on a Saturday, and. the next day being Mm SubhuMi, at nine o'clock, three young men nf our company called at mv lodgiut.'. "Where are you g'ng to-day f they inquired. To church," I replied. "Wo have been teu week at sea; our health re quires cxercifo. Let us walk out luduy, and goto hurch next habbath," they replied. Si id I, "you can go where you dense, hut I 'II gn tn chinch ; the lust woid I heard from my father were, ' Remember Mm Sabbath day ; ' and had I no respect for the Fourth Commandment, I Imvo no. vet forgotten hi lust advice." They went to the fields; I wcnl tollmchureh; they spoilt forty or fifty cent iu the Invorn ! I put one penny bit in the plate, iutlm morning, iifternoou mid ui;.:lii service; total, threo pence. Tin y continued going into the connhy, mid in pen cess of lime the landlady' daughter nnd the landlady 'n niece would join their company. Then each couple hired a gig, at two dollars u day ; wine, cake and ice cream on the road, filly cent each time; dinner nt Jamaica one dollar each. They got homo at eight o'clock p. in., half drunk and having been i niiyht in a Ihiliider oliower, their coals, hats and mantles were damaged fifty percent. They arose the next tnoriiiutr, at !) o'clock, a. m., wiih Here hendt, sore heart and muddy limit, mid angry eoiiicictieo, he.sidon twelve dollars lighter than when they Htarted. 1 went lo church, rose at o'clock, a. m., bend nounder, heart hght, lioue relieiOicd, conscience quiet, and commenced Mm labor ot Mie week iu peace and plenty. They were alt mechanic; some of theiu could earn twelve dollarn n week. My luisiiieM, thai i,f a wrought nail milker, wan poor; tho cur nail machine had just 1 gnt into operation, which cut down my waL'e to u having. With clone application, 1 could only earn live dollaiK and Ijlty cent per week. Never mind at the end of Mie year, my Sabbuih ridiiig fdiinmalo had fine coal, line hat, powdered henduii.l ru tiled shirts ; but I had one hundred hard dollar piled iu ihe corner of my chest. Having lived fas'. Miey died early. Nearly forty winleis are pit muco Iho last was laid in Ihe Toller's, or some nih-r t i -1 I ; while I, hn ing received Iroin my Maker a good conxtituliou, ami common Hciin to talto care id' i',) I am as sound in mind, body and npii jit, a I wa this day fifty-nix years ago, when fust i set my tool on shore nl (inventor wharf. New York; lienide, it is a fart, (lor which my fonily can vouch,) I h ivo been only out dnv conliiietl lo the houo liv sirkiii'M dining thai period. IVow, Mr. I'nnler, t daresay u think, with inc. th it tin church oil Ihe S ibbath in beltiT 'ban tho tav- ru and liehU lor laboring men. JJolitical. USE OF HOMINY, It i surprising how little i known of thisexcellent, hi ulthy lo..d ; niul what an excellent substitute it h tor lolatoen, dining Mm couiinualiou d the disease aiuoiig them, which renders ome that are fair to tin eye, unfit for food, and all exceedingly dmr. In point of economy n human food, mm bushel of beau or hominy, is equal to ten of potatoes. Hominy, too, is a dith almost a universally liked a potatoes, and at the onih about a Ireely eaten, while ut Ihe north it i seldom seen ; iu fact, it is nn unknown food, except to a low per-unit iu cities. Hy hominy we do not mean a port of con rue meal, hut grain of white com, Ironi which ihe hull and chit, or eye, Im been removed, by moistening nnd pounding in n Wooden niortnr, leaving the grains almost whole, and composed of little else but simch. l hut oficu been sn'nl, not one conk in teu known how hi boil a pnlatoe. We may add mioiher cipher when speaking of tho very simple process of conking hominy. Wo give (lie formula from our own experience, and from inclructioii received iu it land where " hog mid hominy " are well understood : Wti-di slightly iu cold water, and soak twelve hour n tepid, noli water, then boil slowly from three to nix lours, in same water, with plenty moro added from nine In time, wiih great euro tn prevent burning. Dun t stilt while rookine, a licit or hard water will hard en tin corn. So it will pea or beau, green or dry, and rice also. When done add butter and suit; or a better way i to let each one season to suit the tate. II in ty ho oaten with meat m lieti ot vegetables, or with sugar or syrup. It is good hot or eohl, and tho more frequently it i warmed over, like the old fashioned put of " Bean porrliltre hi or bcnn orrlIj;n roU, tl.'iiii pornilgi) best at nine days old," so i hominy il in good alwayn, nod very wholesome, and like lomnloes, only require in lie enteii once or twice to fix the taste in its lavnr. If owing II real fat Caket. Maidl the cold hominy with n rolling pin, nml nihl a tittle Hour nnd milk hatter, no a to make Mm whole thick enough to form into little cakes in the hand, or it may be put upon tho griddle wiih a spoon. Hake brown, eat hot, and declare you never aio anything belter of the batter cake kind. Hominy PwhUuff. I'reparo as for hatter cakei. atltl one egg lo each pint, some whole cinnamon, mi- gar to suit tho taste, und a few raisin, and bake lik lice piidilirit.'. A little butter or chopped suet may be adtifd. tvfrvo hut or cold, with or without sauce. Hominy and lirant 'x eqilut pari of cold bakt d bean and h"ininy together, and heat up, and yen wil have nn excellent dish,. The I'low. THE FUTURE OF CANADA. Louis Josmi apinou, in a recent address to the elector of the Montreal district, ha tho following view upon the dentiny of Cmuiila in connection with the United Slates: "( hir social condition in very analogous to Miat of Mie Atneiicaii, but very d liferent to that of Kugland. Our interest are much greater and iti-.ro numerous in America than in tiuluud. Colonial inferiority cannot and Hhoiild not latt forever. The separation in a que, lion of time. It ha it iudiicriiuiuale time, but it i a inevitable nnd certain un death to nil men. And when wn ai"k ourselves what is better for our descendant tin struggles and the rivalries ol'ditb-rent mitiotialitie. or iheir aggregation iu this beautiful confederation there can be no henitiitimi in the presence of the spectacle which American power nive us, who in already the second among llmctvilized nalioiisid the i aril), nnd who, if she continue (o progress during the next filly year to come, a bbe ban done during the lail hall century, wdl become tho most niiiiieroiiH mid povvoft'id nation of ill civilized race. What pigmies would our children he near nuch colonl statues t Must we allow them tn be exposed to the danger nf an unequal nml unlavorablo contest ? Is it not better tn associate them ton future n glorimm as that which will prevail in a stale so vast that many young men ol tlie present day will see it peopled with .lO.OMll 01)0 ol prosp'Toiii mid nltghleiied luhitntants." Widows have Pipial right with married women Hmtn oh r.tniue'te. Well, lum glad ol it lor Iheir sake! U under il they know it ? Some gentleman " colporteur " oii;.dn to bo sent to tell ton if they don't. They ought to wake up to their privileges; ihev've no timu tu lose, snillling nhout trille. Tho True Flag of last week says: " There i nothing on earth so full of rcHination iho oast and hope tor llio luture, iiolhni'' n Inv able ami so lev int.'. as a voting w it low," Well, I don't know anything about d, but I live in hoiu-s; like to know nil Micro in worth knowing; feel awfully be nighted about some thing; should enter the "School t Design lor Women." only I'm afraid I t-hould al ways he at tho toot ol (ho claws! ltut lo i.'o back to widdern; ihe world would certainly fly oil' it axle- tree without 'em! Iiou't Mm dear, benevolent liitle stall give lessen gratis, in "Ueurliiii: made E;iy," to verdant, rising youu-.' men, embryo pnels, n idled -ed young clergymen, ami civil engineer f Can't they mend gloves, mark h a ml k ere hie I'm, ami write little three-cornered, twislilied, gilt-edged, nweet-sconled billet-doux lo Tout, liichmd and Harry T I never saw widow yet, that wa a fool. Wit comes ot weeping. Fanny Fmin. STATE SECRET SOCIETY FOR THE DISTRIBUTION OF OFFICES HFAD-QUARTER8 AT COLUMBUS BRANCH SOCIKTIKS ALL OVER THE STATE THE LATE REVOLUTION AND MORE RECENT GERY-MANDER ACCOUNTED FORI Living here, in plain sight of the Penitentia ry, wo hnvo frequently iiiquipd of the Guard huw It wa that no few Guards could keep in subjection nn many hundred of donpr-rnic men, whoso physical pow- or, when united, would so vastly preponderate overall the power the Guard could hi ing ugainst them T l ho uniform answer is, that before a conspiracy among the prisoner can bo perfected, some nf them are sure tn ; seek favor hy betraying the rest. This i said to be a univcrKiil fact iu regard tn conspiracies", mid it is very rarely one can bo so perfectly managed that some warning does not leak out, which, if attended to in season, will protect Ihe innocent nml the just. Washington's life, and indeed the cnuse of tho Ko volution itself, wan several times saved hi that way. It is no ordered, in the providence of God, that injustice and crime shall always work to a disadvantage. It i also a notable fact, seen every where iu the history of guilt, that they uniuieiiiioiially innuufacture evidence against them-selves, and are driven by an overruling principle nf Mie moral creation, tn adopt such moan of diverting attention from themselves, as will produce the clenrestcnii vit'tion of guilt. When they most ioi-k tu set the laws of Gup at deliaune, they are most within iho inevitn-bo grnp if those laws. It i almost incredible that a conspiracy should exist anyvvhere in America tn tin-mil the elective franchise, by giving the people a chance to vote only for candidate prepared hy the ordeal of a Stcrct Society. Hut it is not more incredible Mian it wai that a conspiracy should be formed in Homo to MfsuKhonnio C kh.wi, and that iho particular friend nf Ci.saii Huutin, fhould he the man in strik the blow. It is nut more incredible Mrm the Secret Cnbnl firmed in Iho Aiuericnn army, at one lime, tt depone and disgrace WasimkoTon, which enme so near being successful. It is not more incredible than Iho blow by which Ko-hi; iii and the hopes of Hungary were stricken down ; nor more incredible than nmny other iu-itjiiice in hi-tory, where liberty ha been surprised, invoked iu cuuniu:: fiieches.and overthrown In nn country on tho whole face of (ion's footont, ha liberty been uble to survive against the evor reclin ing cupidity nnd corruption of Mmso proft-nsing tn ho it friend, except here in this favored land. Anil our terty l yet but about three-quarter of a century old. Are wo lo travel over imam Mm fame inelan- lioly path Miollen trod by ihe people of the old world? Is human nature every where the same? I there mi place, no refuge, no home for free studs, where per feet liberty and equality is suHicient for men ? Where tiie chance to chome and he c lumen freely lo nil placen of trust mid honor, open the do r wide enough to human nmbilion ami human greed ? Whero still olher uiliivimcc! of midnight orgie mid secret oaths will not be resorted lo, to circumvent and forestall iho free exercise of choice and opinion ? Hut the love of power and of L'i'lil, tire both intialialde passion, fiither of THE CROPS. nth LICE ON FOWLS-MODE OF CURE. Our plan nnd wo have pursued It successfully for several yenr in to keep a box or trough filled with dry ashen in the ben house during the winter, in which Miey can wallow every day if Miey choose, and they will wallow there often and long, and never be troubled with insects of any kind. In summer there i less necessity for making thin provision, for then they usually find enough mellow dirt, which is also a good spneitic, fully to answer the purpose unless the noason is wet, so that the ground 14 iu an unwallowable condition, Sourn Carolina. The prospects of the crop!, h cotinn and corn, nro very hue, Gkohou. The wheat crop is generally in good condition. Corn is promising well. Viam.siA. Tho wheat cmp iu the valley f (he James river I said to he uusurpassi'd, boll) iu quantiiy and quality. Elsewhere it in somewhat damueed by the II y and wotin. 'the oat crop isaliuosta Iniloro nn account of the long drought. North Carolina. -The drought has prevailed lo a very great extent. U ells, springs and streams, here tolore perennial, have gone dry, or neatly no, in mnuy seci ions, urn J all ihe crop are serioinly injured. Nkw okk. Wheal is nearly ready lor the reaper, nnd generally looks well. Corn coming rnpidly forward.Mai.ik. Nn appearance of the pointo rot. Iowa. Wheat harvested, nnd a more abundant bar vot wan never known iu the Slate. Wisconsin1. heal uncommonly fine. In (lie cen tral counties the yield will avera:o about twenty-two hurdle1 the acre, Nn traces of rust and (ho berry is plump, heavy and bright. Harley ami ryo also look well. Oats, however, are rather light, and the corn i said to be backward, l otatoe. so tar, looking well Indiana. The wheat ha been somewhat iojnnd by rust and fly, but the crop on Mm w hole w ill be ful ly equal to the average, Tliirly bushel to Mm acre of tho M ditcrrnnomi, me said to have been yielded 111 some places. Theie has been n long drought, and the corn and potatoes nre much injured by it. this shod. Minsui'Hi. The wheal crop is reported as fum in quality and heavy in yield. The corn crop also promise to bo excellent. Arkansas Never, in the history of Arkansas, ha Mm prospect been better for abundant crop. Vmimont. Oorn late, hut looks well oats abundant potatoes tino hay, short crop, but excellent in quality. Col. Harms, the nhlu Associate Editor of the Ohio Cultivator, Im just returned from n visit among ihe Minmi, though ho nays he due not belong to the iVmmi Trihe. We clip the following paragraph from tho very interesting dotting of his journal, iu the hist Cultivator 1 At Oxford, wo were lortunatn to find another live I'oet, m the person of Mr. C. A. Chnniherlain, 11 cor respondent nl Kastern Magnnines. n well a some Cincinnati papois. We took her residence an the tirst nf a largo circle of calls Wn had purposed of an after- main, but alas for our resolution ! when we broke away from the fascination ot her conversation, the netting sun was just guilding the tree top, and the day wa pent, not lost. A volume of Mrs. C.'s poems is soon tn bo brought out hy Messrs. Ward t Tavlor. of Uin- cinnali, and we are gratified in notice that arrangements for printing the work have been made with our friends of the Watt Journal, who do such things right." Wanted, Tho N. Y. Times, nfter noti cing tlie universal use of extravagant language, in this country, which ha exhausted and rendered common place the strongest adjectives nf Mm English, now used, advertises for moro in the following Rtlo: " Wanted, one thommnd new and vigorous adjectives ol 1110 superlative degree; one hundred lor Mm do. nciiption ol natural scenery; one hundred for political opponent tu nluiio each oilier with; mm hundred of the adulatory sort, for the use of ollice seeker. nod the balance tor household word. None but (hone burst tig with tlm spirit of (he ago need bo utfered. Wo want adjet lives that, applied lo cold will make simple burn in compansou ; npiuied tn heat will make common lire cold ; to beauty, will make a frihtol Venn. Wo want adj"clive of npm e, tint will surround and embiace all cieatiou ; nud of si d, that will leave lightning 11 century behind " We have General Young's voucher for (ho (ruth of the following : One line day, during the last presidential CampaiiTit. Samuel Galloway observed a loafer, two sheels over,' sitting on a street corner in Daylon. Samuel accosted him with, ' Itallier unity day, Moses!' ' Ye zir. 11-H-s-t-y day. ' Kaihor ragged for nn cold a day, liauit youT' 'iei ir, r-:i-t-b-e-r rugged.' 'Ami poor, I dare my?' 'Ye. 7ir, not a eenl to buy nothiii 4 And you are drunk I ' rr. zir, B l-i-'-t-l-e ftponifv ) ' And you aro a Locofocn, of course ' 'No .tree ! 1 niut got so low a that yet ! ' An article iu (ho London New contain the following happy picture of Mr. Clay in delude: " Henry Clay's leportcil speeches purtnkn nf (he neutrality of which ho ever boH'ed in the compromise which were tho principles o hi statesmanship. It needed In see the moistened eye, the quivering lip, the tremulous hands, playing with the spoctacle, and tho movements of Iho tall, lithe fmuie ; it needed lo hear the wonderful variety nt bis tones, and lo have thrilled to Mm exquisile pathoa of Id voice, to understand the power which he exercised over Iho whole mind nf those w ho listened tn him in a silence which seemed a il it could never he broken. Tlm silence has changed now. It is he wlm 1 mute, while every other voice i.i busy in discussing his power and his deeds." Niw Kinii or Paint Watik I.imk and Oil. Water lime (hydraulic cement) mixed w ith nil in ihe name way an Hlake'n ( thin Taint or nny ol the several paints lalely brought into use, ha lately been discovered lo lie equal to any oilier substance used tor painting walls, roofs, iloors, fences, nr hii y other wmk ; winlo p, p.,int of economy, is a one In ei'dit or ten. The dineoverv was accidentally made by Mr. John ll-irod,of Hemp stead, Long l-land. It ban been found siiccosslul 111 very irial, drying quickly and hrmly. Tun MAtsAcnr or Caim. Marct and M:n Comikm- kiv We find the following iu tho Louisville Courier : Wo hnvo teen n letter fr.un an olheer stationed nt Fort Wnehitn, Cherokee Nation, of July 1 1th. which fully confirms tlm iiccouni of the terrible inn suae re of Capt. Marry and his whole command hy the On- mauciie. t;apt, Mnrcy w n out on nn exidor im? e. peditimi up (ed river. The party fought the Indians two days, and nil were killed. 1 lie roiiiinaud conUt .1 nl Cnpl. Marcy, of ,rith Infantry, dipt. Mi Olellen, 1 ino rmguieera, DO men, 4 otucers, j cnixenn -ml .'( teamsters, " ru-.ncR CampaH'N Pai'Mi. Iho London (Rn'tinh) Times will be published u n I'ierco Cnmiiaicn miner until ihe election in November. Hurry up your suli- si Tipiioun; mi is ino paper mai made (he dmcuvery that an Irishman in North Ameitca began to be worth something to the Uritixh arisiocrncy, thotiL-h of 110 ac I'oiini nt home. Such a paper must he n valuable ac quisition to Pierce Locolocuism nnd rreo Trade ! A Maine editor navn that a pumpkin, in that State, grew in Urge that eight men could si and round it. This is like tho man who saw a (lock ol blackbirds so low that be could shake a stick at them. them once allowed tn eturelKli itselt 111 tlie tllosen ro of tho heart, that heart can never more beat wiih pulmiliuhs entirely generous or just. Unite them both in one receptacle, and you can on longer account anything improbable. In the hort ap'ico of our national life we have had au Armii.p, ti Ik1 mi, a Hum.. Wo have had 11 conspiracy among oflicer and soldiers f Ihe Revolution, (o depo-e Wabiiimton. Wo Iiuvo had u Hartford Convftitim, and a more recent Stthvitle Convention. I low more nnd m nre dot it M-ein ihut it I hould ho written all along the sky, in every quarter of Mm horizon, in letters of living fire, that old warn-ing " Eternal vigilance it the price, of liberty." If it shall ever happen that the American people cense to frown with unrelenting and indignant reprobation up on nil such scheme ami contrivances to circumvent the lull and fair play of iheir free iiistiiulions, that time will be tho commencement of nn era of ruin; the precursor of that certain doom which Iiiih fallen like a pall over the high hopes ul tho son nf liberty elsewhere, through all ages nf the World. I'.iit let 11 proceed In the t'UOOK OF TUB EXISTENCE OF A CONSI'lllACY. Tlm evidence Ins iiccumulnteil so rapidly within the last few weeks, and has become no voluminous, Mmt in order to condeiHe it within the space uf a newspaper article, wo must select ul discretion from Ihe mam ly ing before us, In Iho first place, wo call attention to it pub'icaliou appearing some weeks ago in the Sonpa-nil, a neutral Ciucinunli paper, from which wo extract Mm pilhol Iho Btnry. It commenced us follows: To the Democracy of Hamilton County. The uinliTiiiMn tl Imvifiu lux n iiiiuIh (ally cauntnteil with llio exlmenre nl s irrrtt fM)itinl nr a ant: at ii'H in lln cainly, We lit-1 it our Ixaiteli 11 duty, n mmtiher Hint nitn'erelri)'tifel the Pern-otTMic. pHrty. to Ishe thin pntili! mcilieil nf e)qiiiiii(i (lie active lnHianli.m ol sutl) n plot il una il Din vitality nl tlie rule (it Hie penol". In thus perlnrinlni; ivloit we ii rei-ivr to Iw our sscn il duly, WA exjioct tlmt Hut Illy rry tlist we nre ilritrnf tti( tlw Denmcrntic p'tftjr, will Im rniiH'tl ly llioie who Imvn n win. It mo- 111 nam tie hi tic lo utille iiKiiurv. loeiCHie llie rerimn pun- itliineat tlmt will lu tm-teil nut to them ly a psrty JchIoum ot iu lutefirily. They spoke n Democrats and member id' the parly, iu pursuance of what Miey profes tn consider a "sacred duty." Ttiey anticipate nbuie from those interested, but think, iiaiuralty, that none but those who hnvo a selfish motive will blame them. They did not seem to Im aware how deeply and generally their parly nil over tho State wa involved in the matter, and were simple enough tu ex ect help in ihe work id' purification. They sny in relation lo (heir mean of information : Thn Infermstlun which we prnpos Inipnrt lo thfi piilillr Wdi clr rlve.l Irani severitl mi niheri nl llie soeieiy ol wiilcn we ppenk, wltufe rhsrsi tfrs hs gentlemen ol vorm itj Ii ui)iiioti(nn- hie. They then go mi tn state TIIE CONTINUANCE AND OBJECT OF THE S( ICIIM'Y. We ( lisrve thst this tm lf-ly lint continued tn exlutfnre up to this tune, unieoa in meiiiDers liiive nu been irltilciiiHl wny williin Hie im ween : mm in ii)efTini;i nre in serrei, lis nielli tiers regiilnrly inllinteit nnd bnutal by nn uliliipitiua lu keep se cret lln hi i stnl rxUlrnrn. Witclmrite, Unit lliu)ili tlm prenmMntn its can nil tut Ion very meuYtly linuiis ilisl iti nhjert in In " punly Ihn Dcmncrslic pnr-ly " itml llie !" slm id Un netterp up nnd mnnsiieri Is, nnd hns iH'en, ta cimiroi itie nominal ions 01 llie imrtr ny 111 secret uaiat- Mtcn nf twn Inuiitreit ini'intiots, n irefentiii(( tlm wants mid lownnaum ol lliti rniiniy. v. Im nre Iinileraliieu tn lie liiuiinl In ma1 nil llieir etalenver lo neiue llie miccmh e.t llie ticket tiiHtitnntril ty Din fociety, when llie dainty C'Liivenhun hnll mul. They do (lot pretend to give the names uf more thai tl few of ils members, hut n few they do give as fol lows : We chftrRe thst th fnllowlnp nnim 1 perrnnt sr, orrtr, sr- Ilvn mill etieruellc ini'tlUnTS Ol Hie Merli IV ' WNIIIItiiiletl nil I. nun, Joi-i)i (oti)rr, Kit wnr l (.'. Itoll, hrlMr)ier rnntshle, noun rixti, j"eili nam, . 11. w. Mi-l.enn, llenrv ItiHillnr. w r. Johiuen, Hnnri l.inck, . J, Wettver, Jehu I.hwiIimi, t.t wmil M. flnelil, Jesie Tiiuanua. We now hasten to the close of the document : We have nnw performed nnr duly hy ftfvlng ihe fwta of the recpnl enlitcnre nl thli itntiuerin pnliticid or until? hiiom ; will llie (Ii nmcrm y iertini tlirirs t ll they do, lliere will anon tie n iretiil rnldaiirent hnd rulit'DIi," nnd die dt iiiacmlic iiulse will DC4I truer mm niroiii-r tor inr piinmumin. l iitil the iilixDuim nl tair rlinmrn in ilniieil, nuthiullnttrely snu wilhnilt eiiuivi.cnnon, nn in inn pH, thu uaiuea el tininmitn will not lie iiuhlicly nicnll'ineO. tliti. fiiiFt, 'I'mtiTHV H. TV, J. W.HMlTU, HaMITKI. KlItlDMK, N. A. Hkitt, Ham'l V. Ciihwin, It. K. Ciix, Wm. Mii t K. JnllN IhiWAnn, l)vil WiilTK, TllUMA HllKfl.uCk. Iheiuselve by an act declaring moro emphatically than any words could do, the infamy and shame charged upon them! They knew it could not stand tho light. They knew it would be overwhelmed by an immediate and terrible popular indignation, and lied like guilty wretches from it defence. Such, then, wa the fact ns to the existence of the society. Such wo the evidence of its character. Now look back and note the mimes of those belonging to it. You observe among others the names of Washington McLean, EnwAttn 0. Roll, Dusj Piatt, Jacou Flinn and William F. Johnson. This Edward C. Bull is the nntne who guve the pretended certificates tn Geo rok E. I'ugh and Wh. F. Johnson, to enable them in defiance of law tn claim seat in the Legislature, and thus disorganized that body fur two nticcoMsivo sessions. This William F. Johnson is the sume Johsson who so lung disorganized tlm State Seiiuto, under pretence of a certificate from this same Itoix. PtioH is now Attorney General, but how much agency that society had in hi elevation is not known; tho society, however, is known to have existed for a considerable length of time. It in proba ble that tho unexpected, violent and unheard of proceedings, ending iu Locnfoco ascendancy hy mean of the Hamilton county certificates, were concocted in this or similar secret societies. IS THERE A PARENT STATE SOCIETY, WITH BRANCHES IN ALL THE COUNTIES? If the party iu other part of the State nre not in. olved in the matter, they would unquestionably de nounce it. They have so apportioned the State that Hamilton county holds the balance of power iu that party. A necret, nworn cabal, In circumvent tho elec tive franchise in that county, would not be submitted tn by other parts nf Ihe State if the lenders all over the Slate were not in il. They would have come to the rescue of Fries and Day, and the hold men who under-took iho exposure, and have sustaiued them iu a mnu- ner to tcHch ihe conspirators a lesson. Instead of this they attack Fkiks and Day. If a single Demociatic paper bribe State has supfiorted them we have not noticed it. Ailack are plenty and bitter. What due this prove? Itppneitat lent (tint the leader of Mm party do not look upon such cabals an reprehensible, and it makes it probable that most of them nre ami- nectt tl with some nuch secret society. In reply to one of lheo attacks from the Statrtman, Dr. Fries wrote to that paper, among other things, the following " I think it prol mti In tli nt ynu (trend n perfect development ot Itiia M't'i'ft puluicHl soclrly hul liens, u It m icy resell a pan nt 010 : Hiai 1 hiinw ot nu uiii! iiiurti likely in be at its homl Hutu llie jathrr ut (-(irruption. " I liinm you will not delay In llie production of ymir exposure. Ami 11 thin IhiiiIit invnln-i llie repulnlioit ot tlm tilh ul Jutiunry 1 iiiiTrian.n, i none me m mucrnlie rren til luii ! n e WU ifive thin nnllee ptihln iiy, in tinier Hint the truth nr Islnity ot your ttmr lnlmiHliou HL'niost the Integrity ut its int'iiibers limy he tully mijiurcu mm." What does tho Statrtman say to the chnt ge that there l n parent society ? Ho begins thus: A Pretty Husb kicked up by a Trickster. The tiilliiwitm article, Irani "lieiaue l-rli-i." wii huuilett us tew iImyh since, liy Andrew Jiicktun Mnrusti. who. mi hsinllnu it to ih. uitido ihe in'ciNcary nuilnf;y lor so dultiK, lor WU tlu nut ' perniit im n (n Iminl iimnich utttcka with impuniiy. 1 We iulii(ih it tnr the purpoae (if exumiiift lo llie IVniucrary of the Male, I he true clin meter uf a outiteii)i KjIh nctiundrel, uho.t.y link, Irsud mid dereptiiiii, wnrkitl lumsell upiai the I iiainM-mtlc Mntti t'eutrnl I'oinmitlee, t.y first Bitling iiiUi the; Chnir li lapurarily, nl Ihe tfth til Jtuiunry Cuiivtntion. Hut Ihe Satcitnan nu where denied the existence of tho " i'akknt seem r." The idea of Ins article seemed tn he that no one known to bo a man who would ex pose such a society, could have got on the State Com tuition without trit kery ; and that lo show that Fiuta wa 11 man tu make nuch exponurcs, was lo "expose to the Democracy cf the State the true character of a con- tcvtftible teountlrrl, I his was the guilt of Frikh; he lied exposed the exinteure of a society, known to bp so liehiiiou Hint lis members daro not defend 11, but openly nml suddenly notion need that itwna abandoned 111 order to save themselves, as noon as it wns 01 posed. We repeat, that ihe Statttman do more denied the ex istence uf a parent Slate society than it or others did llie existence of ihe society in Cincinnati, and it abused Dr. Frik just as liny abused him. Supposing tho nhociico nl denial of iho Editor might possibly be iu-advertunt wo again called his attention to it as fol lows : Secret Society State Society and Branches. Dr. fr'niF.?, iu faia letter lo lh MuUjmiimii, luhlithetl a lew weeha since, ssyat They now divide it themselves, and Mr. Roll in ia the van to represent part uf it. The motive and manner of the present division, Mr. Koemelin has above stated. Dot tn the Secret Society. In addition to the evi dences cited, frequent statements have appeared charg ing it to exist all over the Stale. Our article is already too long to admit of further quotations. No denial has ai'PEarkd. Mr. Roll, one of the prominent member of the Hamilton Society, is now before the people in his district, by a regular nomination, for Congress. Not a Locnfoco prens in the State ha disapproved of the nomination. That sort nf a society is tol erated and approved by the party at large, and those belonging to it promoted to the highest places. Au end must be put to such proceedings at once and forever, or freedom is a farce. The life of Hull was mercifully spared, but he never had tlie hardihood to show his face before the American people on a candidate for olHce. The members of the Hartford Conven tion shrunk into private life. Burr, with all bis au. dncity, uever, after his acquittal, dared ask for popular approbation. If one whole party is now so hopelessly corrupt that no voice of protestation is raised by its pre, we thank God it is not so with all parties. There is yet virtue enough in a free press not ouly to expose the rot ton counsels of the rot leu clan which beleaguer the Male, but tu lash, tho rascals naked round the world. The thing has slept long enough ; tlie Demo cratic press is silent, and so far as their aid is concern ed, the elective franchise may be trodden underfoot. We call upon the Wing press to perform its duty. Suico writing the abovo, another startling fact has corao to light: I'bddatk Jcdoe It. O. llammnnd, Fun., liaa received tho &d- pniiitnmiit of l'nibnte Judjin lor Hammit county, in place of C. (1. 1. add, decesjed. This appointment took many hy surprise, parlirultirly sn it wu generally ktiuwn thst linn. L. Swill wns mi applicant for Ihe oil ice, and had lieen premised the appointment (n his Irfeiidn say) hy (lev, Wood, aome time before Mr. death, iu exnectalioa ul inch an event. There Is 101116 hard thlk nhout it, Himnii; iijuads tit thu " laltblul," hut the protulality is, innt tney win conclude, to " prlii and bear II." It wm rulber hard lor such an old eourser as Mr. U. to ho outstripped by such a sg Summit iieacon. After knowing the facta about this Secret Society btiKiness, it is easy to account for tho numerous movements before regaided so mysterious andunaccountable. 1 think It jiMihnhltt tlmt ynu drestl s perfect development ot till neeret political fnciely Inmiiiem, an It nmy reach a jmrcnt mr ! and I know ol no one mure likclv to to si Hi head timu iho jnuar 01 rurrupuen. 1 nmc von win imi tiemy in inn proauctinn 01 vniir cynosure. Ami nn I lit 4 tWndcr iovulTii the rrimlatifin ot Ihn Ptli ol Jnnunrv Cia.v. nlion, I hupe Ihe th moerHlin -preta nf ihe Male will eive tliit notice pul'liuty, in order ihnt the tniih or tnlmiy 01 your lane iiiitiiiHiin Rgnuial tlie inl. j-tity ut im ineuibera limy he iuiij iniuireu ouo. I'lcace "I'servo that thin i not an aiionyu otn charg It is si;; nod by ELEVEN responsible men. (hie of these is Hon. Okoruk KtdKn, formerly, we believe, n member of Congress, Mid now a niemberof the Lnc loco Siato Central Committee. Atmlhcr of these is TiM'iTiir C. Day, formerly one of tho editor of the t'inciaruifi Enuiier, more receutlj known unthe nuthor of a seriea of interesting travel in Europe. There an other iiaiiien itutong lln 111 known and respected, hut we must abbreviate. What reception did Miey moe with ? Tin y were shut out from their own parly pit' per hi that city, ami obliged to hnd a hearing 11 neutral paper. Mr. Day wa not allowed to mak statement in iho minor he had sorecenllynlited. Mr. Khiw was not allowed to upenk in tin papers of lie party of whose State Ccnlial Cnmmilleo he was member. The charge was then hi-mighl before th Lncofoco Central Committee for Hamilton county, and a motion teat made to appoint tt commit tie to inveititjatf the truth of the matter. THIS MOTION WAS VI ITE DOWN ! But from that day to tbi the existence o iho society, nud il charm ter, ha not been serious! denied. Il turned out Mint the editors of both of th Loenhico paper iu Cincinliaii were members; Mint mnjnrity of the county committee were member or its interests, and (hey were-nil in a blare of indignation at iho eXiMisure. Such rnr.o, such epithets, such abuse ns they heaped upon Messrs. Fmita and Dr, ami Ihe others, for that act of simple, common honesty, is nel tlom seen this side uf Tophel. They acted moro like devils in torment thnn like rational men, butAry did not and dare not deny the facta ! They professed to give up immediately their organisation, declared it to have been abandoned, and thus acknowledged its uij us tillable and guilty character I Thus they sought to save la reply to this intimation, tho editor of the Sinltiman abuses Dr. r'siK, hut intimates no denial of iho uxlittaice uf a "parent society, lln fays, anions; other thitiRi We have in our nosiennon the riir correinundenre of n tr rrrt rnbnl, eetileied in tliU rllv. Iat Winter, lo oiienUi niion the Uienibi-ri (il the l.eiiinlnliire nnd tu Ret a 11 nieetlmri, which failed niter the Athinnil nnd Mntiilield stlnir, no Ur n the puMic nnvt- inxn were roiiceinea. ine wmao tiiinv la very run ilecltlmlly , nml proven inoie I linn tbin hrls would desire Di een peibaps lllllll. Very well) Now, let as bare this written evitlenee, llie Statatnan cot tain ly does not withhold it on Dr. Fairs' account. became lie li willing: enouili to denounce him. Why not, then, Monni tlie wbnlu catislt Who is In ttf How pinny ol the pre. ent l.orolurn Mlatfl ticket! Wns the presnnt Locoloco llckot Itrst conrocted or unt in that nerret cahal t Why su much pains keeptlarkt Let Ihe public have the evidence.. They know that the public butlneti has been hnairlully mimaiiBf(fd; It It baa Uvn done thrniiuh the iolluence of s ferret society uf Lo- roloco politician, let that be kn To this no denial ur explanation lias ever been seen in the Siatesman or any other Locnfoco paper, to the bent of our knowledge ur belief. If any such has ap peared wo would be glad tn see it. They are as silent as the grave. Fire cannot melt a denial out of tin in, or if they are now driven to mako it, it is loo late. They have been silent under the charge too long. It will not do to pretend that the charge is of no conse lucncii. Dr. Fhih wan temporary Chairman of tin State Convention, and is now a member of their Shite Central Committee. There in no refuge but in denial or silence, and silence is confession. Hut ihe pnmf does not end here. It is known that some very strati go appointments have been made by the Governor. Mr. HtF.MKi.iN, a member of the late otihliiutimml convention, andn prominent man among the democracy, slates how one of thein happened. We take a poi iioti of one of his statement, made over hi own niguntiire in the Cincinnati Nonpareil Throughout lat win Or many things, exneeialty the acts of the b'Kidn(io, produced a deep-fen ted dlnanildarllon wiih Ihn Mate ol nor puh'ie art mm. All honeit democrats lelt " That thcro w at HoinctliinK rotten In Denmark." 'I he creation nl tlm Criminal Court, with n direct view tn Joint certain imtorious mdlvnlual Inlotillice, ninrtled tbupiihlle. Mr, linn ilclented that by htiltinir anal nut Ihn boiler.. 'Iho uuhllc were next fin prit it to learn Ihe mljtnallnn of Warden, un the niUiaai. limt Hint snnrie ntiliviiluai ilcienleil liy f lion lor tlie iimiinl Ciairt, mull! hnvea place. Waih Mr lrfau,lbe intended t-ti'Mor ol (oivenior Wood, was the " so tM-lween" to the liuv- crimr lor Warden. 't he iititlersiuned happened tn be In the Onvemor's office, suiiniai at the rciiicni ol ilm (iavernor, Ihe iinnu n of persona miikloK an aiipHcaiion lur pardon, when, nhout Ii! o'clock, Wash Mcl.eno arrtvcti mere, jmi iroin Ibe ran llie (iavernor retire with Md.enn a lew iniunlei, not exceeding, live, and that alii iinoii, the pul'llc learned in the streets tit I 'olniubun. ihe reilitn- lnii 01 v artien, ana tun appointment ut rinit. and tlie neniili :iiit-iunail, tead in Ihe nxt dny'n telegraphic delpati:bcn, Hid no Hsiuuiidinu uiaviusure. Rend with enro how this appointment was fixed "five minutes" between (ho Governor and Wash McLean. This Wan I en is the editor of one of the lo cnfoco papers of Cincinnati, and an acknowledged member of the secret society. Wash Mcl.cnu, the go-lietween was a member. Dunn Piatt, Iho bji poiutco was a meniDer, It was fixed up, Mr. Iteeme- lin says, in five minutes, while he sat in the sntne buil ing, a very prominent democrat from Ilm same conn ly, nud wns not consulted. Timy retired fuun hi pre sence! it was a matter of secrecy, atid the people nf Cincinnati rend in the telegraphic despatches the news ! of that " a(ttmdij?" npin intnient. If the (iovortmr is not a member of thu parent society that fact ought to be known. It ought In he known why an iintmrtniit Judicial appointment wn made with such secrecy and hurry even from memheis nf hi own party, nud why Mm ermine wa thrown upon the shoulder of a man whose nppnintinetit to nuch an ollice excited universal luloninhmeiit. It in not exactly germain to the (epic ill bund, but exhibit loeo-fneoism it, alight su like itself that we cannot forbear In publish another portion ul Mr. Iteemelin's card : The Hpiiortlontiient nl Hamilton county Into two Cuitsrettltin-nl di-Dlcta, wan ilrslled by Adam N. Hidille, llie hmlhet -in-law nt K, Kelt, with 11 direct purpene, to so ihsfw ibe dinirb tn, ns to acccnilih the lollnwin ut-cta: I. 'looinke Ibens'lein duliii-t utronf enough In carry Mr. Kiddle In If.'d, "in pile ul llie I'mlmlicn." J. To mnke Ibe Wenleru trmk rin-iudl, Sn snto turnidji Mr. (toll mid hii Irieiida Ihe only electioiteeriiifi hubby tlu-v hnd a?aliint me, and that wnn, that ihe dcuiocrncy ol Ihe dimrii t daretl ma nnininate tne, bfcui ieii;ioun pn judken were lo hit uxliIikI nniimt 11111. niter llie enniiresnionni npporooninem nan pnsnctl, and in Inrt tetom it, I slated IU pi I vale cetive irnllen tu many demur rail, ihe lii'larioils iiiT(ioies, anil inn treanuli Contemplated by one ut Ihe tialtora ot IMU. Many weitt d!nned tn dlnpate thrm, hut as the canvass dnvel uped tticlf, the (i-nlea let! Irian the eye ul all impaiuai mid lioti-ent men, and the ibiiig is now nbvleun to all. This wan the bill jmacd by the majority. Mr. Roll wnn horror-stricken because theconuty was divided by the whips n few years ago ; and a revolution was got up RIVER AND HARBOR IMPROVEMENTS. On almost every subject now before the peo ple for their decision iu the coming Presidential elec tion, ihe Locofocos show two faces, either northern and aunt hern, or eastern and western, as circumstances may require. On the slavery question, they have a northern and a southern face. In this State, especially in the uorlheni part, several papers are supporting Pi erci because of his anti slavery speeches, j-iferring from them that his election will be a positive victory for those holding lluise views. In some points in the southern Slates, hi election is urged on the ground that he is an old and decided pro-sin very man, nud unequivocally in favor of Mm linality of (he compromise. On (ho River and Harbor bill (hey (urn their imngo partly around, causing one face lo look east and the other west. Iu their plutform they took special pain to form an easy pivot on which tu make Micro revolutions. Their resolution 011 this point rends a fullows : Nf wired, Thst the Constitution duea not confer upon the Gen eral Huverninenl die power tu commence and carry nti a Gen eral r-ytin nt Harbor Improvement, and thnl wh are opposed aucu a policy. Here it will ho seen that under the phrase, " geuer- al system," Miey are at liberty tn go either against the hole system, or in favor of a partial system, as the pe- uliar location inifdit require. This feature of their platform has already been seized upon and madeavailable. On one side, tho Sandutky Democrat and Cleveland Plain Dealer deny that the Democratic party were over opposed tn River and Harbor Improvements, and oldiy ussert that nil appropriations heretofore made for these objects have been made by the Democrat party. They even claim that the Democrats were the exclusive Iriouds ()f the River und Harbor bill that lately passed the House. Their boldness and recklessness in this case aro more to be admired than their veracity. Of (he 103 vutes in favor of the bill, 58 were Wing, 41 were Democrats and Freesuil, Of the 75 votes against it, 12 wero Whigs and (13 were Demo crats. Absent, 17 Wbiga and HC Democrats, and 1 Freesuil. And yet, the Buffalo Courier says "this is a Democratic measure, maintained by Democrats, and paued by a Democratic majority in the Home of Repreten taiicet!" Democratic measure! with 99 Democrats ither voting against it or dodging it, and only 41 vo ting for it! Five-sixths of all the Whigs voted fur it. while a largo and decisive majority of the Democratic members voted against it I Yet those Democrats who voted for it and those who voted against it can all stand iu loving brotherhood on the plank of the platform quo-led above, und both appeal tu it an a basin for their ac tion. So much for Ihe veracity and sincerity of these northern papers who assert that the Democratic party tire now or ever have been tho friends of River and Hut hor Improvements. Not one third of the Demo cratic members in Congress voted for tho bill, and yet it is railed a Democratic measure! Five-sixths of all the Whigs voted for it, and yet the Whigs ate reported by these papers as doing their best to defeat it ! That will puss. Impudence und hypocrisy can do no more. But what sny the other side those wlm worship tlie olher face of this Locoloco image? The Richmond Examiner, representing the inflexible Democracy uf the Old Dominion, speaks thus of this same bill: Thii hill ti the fint ot tho sort that has been rained lor a Inn it time, and il wilt be the latt for fur notri si It ait. Kranklm i'kree will come Into power ob lb 4lh of next Much. Aitrfet eonntrnedon ami mjicct lor the Onititution is the Medeen law 01 meuemucrniiR iiartv. aim sir. fierce, ben des that annrraJ reaion, m bound irrry idta of rantuttney, and mry fact of ni jmih rarrrr, 111 rem mrji oik iic tm; it will Do it, II Ihey aro lime nicu 10 nun, juit in mmy aa mere is a tun in tne iky. That sound like a notefiom another instrument- one not tuned tu the samo key as thai upon which our Sandusky, Cleveland, und Buffalo friends have pitched iheir Democratic organs. Nor does it sound alone a whole choir of southern Locoloco instruments pour forth their notes in perfect unison with it. As a sample, hike the following from the&muinaA Georgian, which, after publishing the vote of the House on this bill, exclaims: "Look at that Hit t On one able, tn favor id the mramrn vnn will nee all ihe northern votes, with Ihe exception ot a few ever -.muni nnu unwr imi-iuur u-iouie nonorea nnrinern uemocrain. Annum theio Innt our eve reata with inexiirenaibla tileaiun. mm.. Ihe name ut Hurry Hibbard, of New llampihire, and the friend ot Franklin I'inrcn, and, we believe, the rpteeiitatlc of bli dis-ti let. A little lower down la that of "caalc, another Grand Stale iMuocrst. With H'bhard, Peaitee, and Jaekion, ntnnd nearly every uemacratic meuiber ol Uongresi from the noutb. ' These "never-ttm-much-honored Northern Demo crats" referred to, nit voted against the bill 1 and the fict that Hahry HinBARD, of New Hampshire, "the friend nf 1-ranklin Picrcb, voted aaint tl, is sig nificant, lie does not voto thus without reason. He knows he stands as the index of Pikhci's wishes and intentions, and he votes iu accordance with those wish es and intention, if nut iu actual compliance with hi request. Thus stand Ihe facta, and thus stand (he professions ol the two winp of the Locnfoco party on this impor tant sui'ject. 1 he people can see them, and can read for themselves, and will put Ihe right interpretation on tlm new-horn xeal of a few Northern Locnfoco pi per in lavor of river and harbor improvements. Iu contrast wiiii iliis double-faced, meaningless resolution of the Lncofoco Convent inn, wn place the following resolution of (he Whig Convention on the 1 11 tne sub ject. It snv what it meant, and it means what it says: The conitilullnn vcata in TonRrein the power to open and repair Inn horn, and lemtm- uhai ructions from navignble rivers; and it in exiedient that CoiirrM ntmuld rxercine that power, Mmr axrA mmttrtmint arr nrerv for 1A1 common S, tru. t- or lor tho protet lain and facility ol coimiieree with forrln na-tloiin ur mnoiiK the Platen; such improvements buiuu, in every imuoce, unliounl and Heiiernl In their chancier. PROBATE COURT. It is proper lo stnle we never understood from any mm that Judge Batkb md decided against tho right nl' Mm Probata Court in take mgnixance of that chis of cases which, by the cotislituiiou, do not require an indictment by a grand jury, and we nerer made any attrrtivn that he had to decided. It wns lint at all within tlie n oie nl his duty to make any derision, pro nr con, un that subject. In no sense was It Ho only di i iilnl llml he liml un jiirlmlictimi, in whic h Im i. fully ii.liiiui'd by llio UWilm.iu. nml tlm publUh- l li lli r Ml Atliirney (irui'ral 1'uiih. It tlinn. nud i yet our niiiiimi limt llio I'mUto Court hail no juri.. dic tion, or miliiT. .mlnii could not net, in nnj .cmia to rtiiurre uio wiomy ot tho low, until lliu l.i.giilnture, fiylM, ire.c:ribi'd tho mctnn.rof tfiliiiff. llio Mi'imnii, nud the mat of innnkiud. will nlnmn hew Ihi. in niiiiil. Our lnii(!un(;i) will brar no olher iMii.triicliuu williuiit viuli'iicn, nml ws k;oa il nuvcir intended Ut heur nny oilier. Woknow llieu, ju.l in well ni wo do new, thnl .Iwlgo Utk liml no pnwsr to bv nny ouiii on tin, ulijecl. Iledrow the inference, and liy it wo .land. to net the law naida, which wa. partially iucoe..fuL lucky. C. M. Clay is very sick at Whitehall, Kon-

If VOLUME XLI1. COLUMBUS, OELTO, TUESDAY, AUGUSK, 1852, NUMBER 52. lUcdiln Oljto Stale Journal I- l'lrilLtfUKD AT C0LUM1IUS EVEIlY TUESDAY MORNING. SCOTT ft BABCOM, JOUHSAl, BIILDIM1D, Hlltll AND VRAM BTftttTU INTRAWC1 OX U1UII. TFIINS hi i wf'flfc'v ti'htttir : Tn rohunbiis, 2.00 a yenr j hv mail, SIWI; 1 1 ilbs of four and uustnrd, tfl.l&j of leu andHp-war.!-. SI IN). THE DAILY .lOtlltNAI.UfurnhhiiU Ut city unlwrilewat SC.OO, ami lt inml nt Ji.isin vi iir. I NK T'ltl-WKCKI.Y '.luUKXAI. Is S3 00 r year. HATES nKJDVKKTtSINO AT TlfF. WEF.K I. Y J 0 UliNA L 3 Jj t i S i I a E a : i 1 wi tin re, ol ;y w 4 uju wis oi '1 i(Urtn, "r 1 lift 1 1 tit OH OU& WH1 WH Wt'l'J. ir. 8Nuarrs, ,1 0(1 1 7f2 WH 60 5 00 G W8 Will. 17. A Ntpinrvs, 1 'iVJ 253 l (Wo Outi WH UOll). 14. i ; weekly ; I siimr, ' i column, I'v colninu, II coluniu, chiui ical ilo monthly, &'20n yenr ; t'tiHiip'iiniu mini lei iv .. . rliuiiui-nlilfl ijimvli'i'ly. , , diiiutfi'iitilu ipiartprly, . . luO. 10 linen of Hit slrd type Is reckoned n mmtv. Advertisements ordered on ttiu Itihklo rxohiivrl v, tlnuWo the nbove rale. All Jpailfil noticm charred double, hihI nieiwired a if solid. (Original Sketch,. For the Ohio Rati) Journal. TnE SOLDIER'S RETURN. AN INCIDKMT OF TUB " 11I.ACK-H A WK " WAR. II Y J . W . It. li lt my heart! t-alh was before tun! 1 fell his icy I nnd lliu dirt udhesive, when tho dry ashes are tn he tout-li, and liml given ut to die. Then 1 thought of j ymi ami L(ir child, mil begun to bewail ymir hnph-as 1 condition. In the midst of my diires, nml white pilenuslv lamenting my hiu! file, noticed a sympathizing cnunietiinco above mo, from which two eye lull of compassion beamed upou me. Tlit-n a voire spoke won In of comfort nnd hope. In a moment, us if by magic, 1 fell new life i prit'fl ii witliin nio, TIhti' whs ono mull, at Irani, who ft-urcd lnt llui dodtrnycr wlio hi'iuvntiiit!y mimttU'ri'd lit tliti elliich'd, klo wnh jui'h, nml looki'd woiii ilnwn, mid wm niulor tlio inllu-ifiif'B of tlio Hcour(M, toil ' ho went idmnt doini; jnod," Hpi'iiking conif.Tt, intiiriii liojio, 11 saw hiu words liiid ..iul ittct in my cnxe, und (or ludl anlioiirlio studd l y me, nit u iniiiif.tc! iij,' hiijji'I wIi,ro jireHHticu wiih mi iinlidi'tt uuiitHt tin- d HCiim1. I kmiw I fthotild g well, from lliu iDHiiP'iit lie left me. I did do; hut I h:dl iii'Vit, mrer liirfjul Hint imhle, gniennid, devout ifimi who (t:v il mu Trem deulh !" And tl'til you know him 1 " " I did ; it wai (Ii-nopd WiNPiKt.n Scott, Iho iuohi huiiiaiio muii living ! " " (ind ldtpHHiid rewind liim ! Oil, liow I idiniilil likti tn tlmlik liiin, nnd pour out the gnititudo nf toy ln-url for th'ot lmiiinin 1 " Sli.mlil ihifl nkiMcli f ill midur the iiniito of iho par- lies, lltny will pleiino ifxrime thin liliorly wo lmv tidu'i), iiuint'fl boing Hliidiuiisly tmud d in llio uairnlivo Vcivicitltural. Nn country in Hdi'T in liKtorirnl incidentn ihan i.t the Went, Ohio iiful her sister Sirttcw, where hiive ux-t the while nnd ml iiicii in dendly Rlrilo, and whero the R'irriii;j nnil !m lliu;,' m-oipM ol iioiii''r lilu lmvo been minuting lor Mm lu-t ihreo-rotirtlit of ti century. And nevt'r h i tlicro been w;iutioj; th il renily, srlf ciici ilic tug p;itrioii-m, from Iho t illicit tti'llli-nu'llt t-f tr country down in the jm-mit. tliy, whit'li nloi i nble, out til n wilderiK-PH wt.i.io, to buiid up roiouiuuiiics ninl S'niet. Twenty yeurii n!o lli ctdihrated Hlvck Hawk, ni I he bend of Iim lmli.ni forroft, bxviine en-in-'cd in lio-tilit en with the while. IilinoiH vv,,r thi n lite border Slule, nnd Mi" " brunl t f iho b illle " fell upon her ; but it Wai nppii ln'iirlcd by the ( iivtriimeot of the United Shi'i't Mint ti gi iieinl conlrder.iL'y of 'lie Indifiri Iribt'H, uhi. h whm li-lii'vnl lo be I'ontf tnpliiteil, would eiiiiltlo (lit1 ciierny to brini! into in lion n 1' iii f;d nrmv of warriorn, lit-l-no whom the i!l-tivp;iivil nml thinly fctth'd inliiibilantt nf tlio t-xpoiicd tctrilory would be driven nwuy or tuunb-red. I'n'b-r lh-no j ihius t ir-ctimKluuccH the 'iVi-rliiiM'iit C int liliout for II xiiihible h'Hilcr. In tjdto cbari'o ot Iho op- mMoiiH of (he finny in I tli nt nunrter. (o'nend Srott inn ruiini'iitly the iniiii lor the ci M4, find he wns necordiniMy n lo coiiiiiihimI llie troops mid t'onduet Iho wnr. (if lln- leinhtig events Connor ted widi the ' iiu;k-Hiiwk Wjif " we ithnll uy notli'm;;. They nr nmlterK id" geiiorid history, to which lluj lender ii referred, ltut in nil eiirh Iiiih k lln-ii' nro under -current nf event not iiVHtiti(l on ttie preiit purl' mj wlii. h wh behold, wliieh, neverihe-less, lire deeply iiiteri'iitjiifj, und tend ninii' ihrn tiny ihili' tl-e loebicid;iti c''nnier, mid develop tlio reul b elinyi nnd emotioiH id" the lienit. U( ourli on incident we write. The nliirui Ind been mug out, the c;il niide, und buiidn dtt ol cilizniN were prepuriu' to ui:irth to the Kceiio of dnnpvr mid of conllict, to d buttle for their hoincB, I heir wives, children, friends and country. Never Inn our gn nl und lorioun tiition Incited for defender in the hour of trial ninl poitl ! Never inny he ! (n Iheir Western home n newly nuittied couple, with (ino little child, Were nturtled by Iho wnr-'-ry. The hiifdntud i.iw iho need Id couutrv hnd of defenders, nnd the rniiiut wi hmd between )iitriotiiirii and tlio enjoyment of hi pleiiKiint lire Hide, nnd tho com-pHlitnnNliip of hia beloved mid ithdii'd wife nnd child. Hut the fierce Htrupgtn wa nt hint ended in hi bosom, by deciding to ihi what he believed lo be hi duty, nnd lenving iho event lo Providence. Ho would r,n to defend hix rininlry ; bul how wouid ho break the new to hi wife? for w. II ho knew how sorely lier heart would be troubled ul lliu uiilloilliretnejtt of hi deter-ininalioii to "go out in the bultle." It tnunt be doii(!, however, mid in the hi nt milliner ho kin-w how, tin ditlictill mid deinite tank win performed. She wept hitler h ur, nnd entreated liim to remm'n nt home, lo prelect lier nnd (heir lielple child henrt wan totirln it hy her distre and nluioit ho wns perninded to nhmdon hi inlention. Tll'-n ciiino the ill. ini'lit that if he did no, very mioii, it mi;dit be, he would have to f;ice the aviK;ii I'oo there, hy hi own heart h, ut Iih own homo, where In dent one won also be export d to their inw ilcoH vengemice, while now ho could iiu el ihein tivvay on oilier ground, whero hiuifielf alone would luivo lo nland belore the dinger, whilo thoe who Iny no near hi heart would bo mile These ('oiiHidornti'in entiibliHlied hi resolution a limt formed. Me retmniied I h "Til over lo hi companion. comlortrd her n far n her leelin:; would nduiit nf comfort, Iniilo her nn iillertinmitu mid teHrfol Rilieii, and departed ! Oh, how mitioutly Mint tender wife find mother nought for int'-lligeiico from the nro no of conflict! How every teporl d' danger or of buttle Idled lit r heart with dread nnd fear ! Mi-ivinc, dark nod har rowing, kepi her mind in a tnle of coiuiimnl drond. filling it with every rottceivnble thought of ovil nnd niinforluiie whielm f. veied imnjiinnlion could cnll into being! At lenglh enme tho new of iho great bnltlo of the Had Axe, mid of the in let y of hor dunhaml. She fell nn her knee mid Mmnked iiod for his inen ibd gooil lieRd ! Hut, ilia for human fortune! her joy wn of limited duration, nnd cut tdioi! in it.t hill mid ovuill.iwuig tide A lew day puiMt'd nwny, nnd Mm now came that (he pt'ntileiu'o, fur mere dreaded than tho enemy, bad routed, like lb nveu h blighting mildew, iiioii iho rank of noble, mid brave nitn,o recently victoriou in their ciamlry' cnue. Tenor spread on hII ide nt the ap proach of the uiioueii foe, whnott deadly Mtroke laid the brnvesl in llioihitt, ng tiimt whoso atlnck (hern wiih no defence, and from whose relentlu; purNiitt there wn no escape. Deulh n ined supreme ami the cur- niv.il went on on on! n though Mie iusntiato mnnsler would iifrfr he Matilii'd ! I Alone with her child nt tho wife, in an ugoiiy of Bilspento nml fear, mixioti nml still d reading lo hour from tho ubdent one, when suddenly hr oliiudo wiih broken in upon by tin aciuuiutaiict; jut front die army, who, in great notation tit what ho had seen, and very deBirou to lleo nn fir uwny from tho iufectioiiciiiii ni possiblo, merely pinised tn any " Your huniuind is thjinfl iritft the cholera" nnd Imntuned etV, a if in tho hope of getting beyond the reach of thodi Hirnyer, the roar of which drove him onward. Who ihfill inenfiiire tho anguish nf Out tenth r wife, a tho awful truth fell thus heavily upon her heart! Who shall paint the agony she endured, as she pressed her child to liar heart in iho tuidt of I hut more than midnight darkness from which hope had juttt lied while Iho burning eyes refined the tear which relieve the oven barged heart! There she sal training tho little one to her bosom, in which despair hnd taken ii it home, a hope expired! The first thought wiih h followed the nlmniing ht ck, Was, that who would hni- ten to the scene of deulh, and have a Inst look at the remnin id' her husband. Hut friend opposed tho measure, and iho tlmu;ilit of leaving her child, or of being taken from it and leaving it unprotected in the world, influenced bur to stay whero "hewn. Her grief at last found tear to give it utterance, and she wept a only such enn woep. Time passed. Kmm the Ohio Cultivntnr. A PLAN FOR DRVINO FRUIT. 1 have a house eix feet Bquure mid seven feet hi mi, with a ti'Mit Hour; ut bottom nnd tun the Iratne is mudeul' Bcantline-uhout three iiu'lies snuare.with tliroe im.-dn on each side ; these threo aide nonat have inch hulen thrtute;h them nix inches npurt, trotn uottuiu lo top, to receive hnch puis, eighteen or twenty inciies Jony;, to sustain the Hhulven con- lainiii"; the fruit. Tlie slielvcs used arc half inch Imardri, live feet ten inches loiifr, and ten incla'H wide, with tlie corners ut eacli end a little rounded: so that they may he laken out or put in handily. Two of these boards lie on one rtume of pins oni' boanl id' twenty inches would tin, hut, is nit her heavy when tilled with green fruit. A door two feet wide nnd seven foot, hifjli ia about, ri'ht lot it bf! in the centre of one end: it is then convc nt to Htnnii outside and slip in the shelves filled witli fruit, either to the ri'Mit or left. A tnnal stovo placed in the centre completes the fixture, except a covering lo the buildiny;, which may be auaciieo 10 it, or tt separate concern. Any ttirtner who has n Uderahle sutinlv of snriidit- ly buys or jjirla, can in one nitrht, from dark (ill bed lime, prepare enoiii'h Innt to cover all the shelv in the house just described, which will make more than a bushel of dried fruit; and twenty-loin hours is Ktilhctent to dry it cuinplolclv, by keeping up n iiindfrnlo (ire in (lie stove. The temperature in the dry Imuse tdiould be nhout 15ow Fahrenheit which is ensilv niaintained if the house is ti'dit. About threo hundred feet of well seasoned bounh will suliice for the whole concern, which should In toiifjued and grooved. A workman can make it in two or three days, und when once made, an swers fur many Important purposes besides drying truit; and it insects tire likely to trouble your dried peaches or apples in the spring of the year, remove them to the dry house, and subject them tu a heat ol iibout l.M)" tor several hours, and it wi lli'ctuully remedy the evil. Mioajam T. Johnson. A MODEL FARM, NEAR GENEVA. N. Y. ti. id and uiei'utiK'uate Rat llie mother, weeping over her child, n it lay unconscious ol misery on her lap, when she was aroused from hor stupor hy a rap at Iho door. Hbo. opened it, and in a moment was cnlolded in her husband's arm ! Oh, llie joy of that unexpected meeting ! who hall tell it 7 They wept ! but now they wore tears of hlins of exquisite huppinens! So soon at language could bo comuiHiidud, she inquired, " How in ihi t I heard ymi wore dead ! " I " Not quite, ihnnk Heaven and tho best mini living ! " How so? What mean you? " " Sit down and I will toll you." " I was indeed near unto death. Fear, terror, dread wer aa powerful an the pestilence by which I was acked. I mw ttiv couinauiutii fall ins aniund me on ill tldefl. I saw the aur aeons were bafllnd. Bml hnnn The eilitnr of tho jmlon tiiHivntor, tSaufnid How- iird, Kmi., iu hi recent fsote by Mm Hy." ol a visit to several percoii in the Statu ot iow York, lhu speaks d llie luriii of Mr. John JuhiiMon. ol S neca couuiy: Coiitiguoiia to tho bum ot Mr. Helidield is ilia' of Mr. John Johnston. Our rendei will recollect the late mention Mr. J. iu connection with Iho nuhieet of ilrairiJigo. Since In report to tho NttiUi Auriculturnl iety wn liindo, an extract front which aooenretl in n late number of this paper, he ha laid down on hit tiirm upwnnl ot II). Hull tllet, tii iltnig, in the whole. tpwmil ot 1(1(1,0(1(1, ex l end i eg lo an tiLreruie leneMi of more (ban twenty milea, I litxl not liau the oiiportuuitv ol oxmuiiimif Mr. JolitiHtoti's farm for four or live year, nnd I wa mix- inn 1 " Mm ellecia of the tyteni of tJrtiinage mi which ho bad (hen junt l.iirly entered. They have been all that tile inont Hiniuiue could have anticipated. Mr. . I. ' leading crop i wheat. When he, made hi piin liiiBe of u part of bit present farm, it was regarded by mnuy, nnd even by Iho lurnmr owner, a worn eui, d ' lit lor liollnng but white benus." Mi fnt crop watt of coiirso cniupamtively huh. He saw that the muin dillieulty was want of drniunire. Tin cailwi-d Mie grniti to " li'ei'e out,'' and pin ked the soil n hard as a sun-burnt brick. Ho commenced dramiiiL', and hi Dutch neighbor commenced laughing at linn. Haying Mint hi crop would ho "nil dried up before it was half grown. 1 hey weru amacdlbat the result was directly opposite from their expectation; but did not fail to nolo the iiuliivorablo coiitraU which their own cnum presented w hen compared wiih Mioso produced on Mr. JoIminIoii h ilianietl laud, Tim advatilaecM of draining have Hot been confined to tho wheat crop, but have been very conspicuous iu other crops, not excepting clover and griiMs, which art more luxuriant nnd nutrition in many iuHtimces I alter draining Minn they wero before. His wheat crop, ol which lit lln generally from sixty lo eighty ai re in a ytinr, ua aveitiyeti iiurly to llui iv-tive, mnh-' In lo tho acre. Thin v ear, when much complaint is in in I e nf wheat having " Iroen mil," mid of tho weevil, or wbeal-niiilgo having greatly injured il, hi crop will, according to tho estimation of the best jud;.ea, live ti!o over tbiriy tumheU to the acre. Then) wn no " free- OIK tint hero every irratu sown vegetnled, und every plant bore il proper quota The field weie so oven ill yio.d Unit little or no ddleience could he snen in the different parts. One field comprised nhout two acre of land wnicli never till this year produced n crop of any kind it had only borne coarse, sour water grasses. It w.i drained laxl year and sown to wheal in autumn, in connection wiih the rent of the field. It Im produced Hiic.h a crop a I never before taw. and a ftiunhir !iiliiiixi'in bill been made hy all who havtt seen it, a i ii no tr whom are Novcral of the best wheat farineiti in New Voik. I have heard no one estimate the j i, Id of this pnrl of llie field ut lesi than bl'ty biubels to the acre, and il in generally said, " if there wn tin midgu tu it, it would reach sixty bushel to the acre." lint tho ini-lgo In not in in led Mr. Johnston' wheat near as mueh a.-t it ha that on many oilier farm iu this secuoii, lino in ih exemption, Mr. ,l. say, i attritnitnole to tlraining. The explanation i clear ami satislnctorv. It is known thai the em best winter wheat is leant subject to the attack of tlio midge; hence, Iho Meditenn- neaii Variety which ia very early, is often adopted where this insert prevails. K.oly wheat reaches a stage, in which il is not attacked by the time tho mide liiaUea its appearance. In coiMcoumice d Mr. John ston's wheat being on drained land, it ntarted early and made rapid progress to maturity, gaining threo or four da) stiver whtMt nn idmilur land undrmned and this tune was sullicient to fqvo tho crop from serious damuL'e. It would bo wrong, however, to say Mutt Mr. John-1 ston'n great success in producing wheat and oilier crops is wholly owing tn dunning. His method of cultivation in very thorough In all rotpect. Hi soil i naturally quite teuaciou, which in hii opinion render fullovvim; expedient for wheal. Ho plow deep, mid works the soil lo a lint tilth, II general plan combine' both stock-feeding nml grain-growing. This i tlm true system, and I may say i tho only one by which the fertility of the suit can be permanently sustained. Mr. J. ha formerly kept sheep, tn lliu number of l.diii) or I, -'nn, but lately ha reduced his llock in l.'iO, substituting cat tie iu (heir place. He fallens the entile chielly in winter, lie tin Ixtlened 8 ! head since Inst fall. His practice i to buy a hl of three or lour yenr old cattle in November or Heceinber. and turn llietii otf to fat iii February j (hen put up another lot which are only moderately fed till m'tif is ready lo luru them (in, when their feeding nt the burn i dis continued, and by gnu only Mm anioui1 lire soon ready lor llie butt lier. He ha just Mild seventeen I lend id' 3 and I year olds, not yet driven away, for $4 per hundred, live wei-ht thy lot averaging l.MKI pound each. It will rem lily bo seen that by ihi system, Mr. Johnston provide himself with hii'e ipinntitie of rich manure. This i applied chielly to the Indian corn crop, of which Do ruiNOi every year a lame quantity, which conttitutcii the principal material in fattening hi stock. His larm i all the lime growing licher, nml Inn crops better, and yet he says ho bus never bought hiiv ma. mire, nor ul lale years any material to make it. There are many points in bin nutuageiuont which I ret; ird ns particularly judicious, and concerning which 1 tdmll have occa-ioti to speak hereafter. Hi lixtonnfor slull feeding nro decidedly Iho bent I have ever seen. provided, 1 here are two causes lor poultry liecoming lousy poverty and I'MMi. The lirl must of course be rema ned oy providing a oecenr supply ol loon; lor me second we bavo prescribed. The dry nhe or dry lirt will not adhere, to them; ami tho former, in par ticular, ii calculated to remove filth by natural cleansing powers, nt least in every rain. Wo once aw a hen that had nearly ot all her feathers, nnd whne carcass was a densely inhabited an Mm ('hinesn terri tory, divested ol her whole population iu a week, ami anew crop of feather started, by placing within her reach the ash bath, which lm improved uccottling to hor own (ante and inclination. otisinef in poultry, utiles soon eradicated, will crow into greater and moro serious evil. From hen they procoed to calves, and from calves tn older stuck, until at last each of the farmer' animal become n world over which they scatter and multiply, nnd prey ; while poverty and haggard look seize on their victim, nnd evil consequences arise which only cloao and long 'untitled care can relieve. There in no stock which pays no good a percentage on the capital invested a fowls. Attention, that great requisite to success m all kinds ol huHine, is, liowev r, essential in this: and mt m proportion mh this l bestowed, will its advantage be realized. Your, truly, v. it. YVlow, Loom, nnd Anvil. GERMAN AGRICULTURE. The nccoiint given hy Mr. Hewitt of German agricul ture cannot fail to interest our reader. He Hays: Each German Itus his house, bis garden, hi londsiili tree, so laden with fruit that if he did not carefully prop up anil tie together, aed in many places hold the briugha together with wooden clamp, they would Im torn asunder hy their own weiutit. Ho has Ins corn- plot, his plot o t rnnncl-wiirtzel, or a hedge for potatoes, for hemp, &c. Ho i his own mnkT, ami lie, there- lore, and every branch ol Ins fiunly, hive Mie strong oat motive liir constant exertion. V.ui eo (he ctleel o, Mr in hi industry mid his economy. In Germany noliiiug in lost. The luo.Iiiro of tin l roes and the cows i carried to market : much fruit, in dried lor winter use. You see it lying in the mi n ury. i on see string ot Tiiein linnging iri-in itioir chamher windows in ihe sun. I he cows are kept up lor me greiter part ot Iho year, ami cveiy green tlno is collected for ih-'tii. livery lilllo nook whero Me grass grows, by rond-ide, nnd river and brook, i cart! fully cut Willi ihoHiekle.mid carried home on tlio heads ol the women and children iu ha-tkets, or lied iu hu g clolli. Nothing of nuy kind Muilcan ponnibly be mail ol nny use is tost; weeds, iionlcN, nay, the very goiiMi L-rat-s which covers tho waste places, i cut and laken for Mm ciiWH. You e the little children standing iu iliostreeiBot tlie village, iu the stream which generally run down them, huy windiing tln-. e weed be. fore Miey are given to the cattle. Thev carefully collect Mitt leaves of the marh gras, carefully cut their potato lops for them, and oven if other thing fid, gather green leaves from tlm wood hmd. Ouo cannot help thinking continually of Ihe etioruinii wuMo of such thing! in Knylaiid of the vast quantities of giass on bunk, by roiuUide, in the opening of plantations, in I linen, iu chuieh-v nrtU, where grass from year In year spring nnd di', but which, il mtohilly cut, would maintain many thousand ctiwH lor Mie poor. Tu purine hI ill further this subject of (Jeriniiti economy. Tli" very cntiingH of the vinea are dried and preserved for winter lodder. Tho top mid reluso of hemp nerve a bedding lor the cows; nay, even the roiij'h Mtidk-t of tlm poppies, after Mm heuds have been gathered lor oil, are saved, ami all these arc converted into manure for Mm land. When lhe-,e are not sulli-cienl, til" t hildien are si lit iulo tlio woods to gather mo, nnd nil our render familiar wiMj (urmany will rcinemlier to have eeu them coining homeward Willi large Iniinllenor Mil on their bead. In autumn, tho lulling h aves are gathered and Marked f r Ihe name purp'He. ' ho lir cone, which with u lie and rid in tlm woods, mo caretully collected and sold lor lighting fires. In short, tlm economy and care of the German pens-i it mi example lo all Kurope. '1'hey have for years, nay ages, been doing Mint, ns regard agru idiiiial ninn- meiit, to which Mm HrilMi public is but just now beginning to open it eye. Time, also, in as carefully economized a everything eUe. They nro early risers. a may well bo conceived when the children, many id whom co mo trotn n considerable distniice, nro in school ut six in the morning. Ah they (end their callle or tin ir swine, the knitting never ceased, and hence the qimu lily of htoi kim.'s ami other lii'ii-ehold lliini; which th'-y act uiiitihiio i a"loni hhing. ilarictn. THE CHURCH AND THE TAVERN. II Y I.AUH1K Tout), In the yenr 17JK1, when Lou. in iho Sixteenth was be headed, and the French Uovolution was in full blast, I wn a thorough going radical. With seventeen more it our club, i wa marched under lif t, guard ol tlie king's nllicers. and lodged in Kdinburg !inil. After a nummary hearing 1 got liberty to banish mvself, mid accordingly 1 took passage in tlmgoed slup I rovideuce, I and landed ut New York in June, I7!M. i wa then iu my Iwenty-second yenr. When the ship cast off fnnn 1 the wliart, in rvcothiiul, and swung ronmi with (he breeze, my father Niod upon the shorn. He waved a Innt adieu, and rxelnimod, " Renteinber the Satibalh lay." 1 arrived at New York on a Saturday, and. the next day being Mm SubhuMi, at nine o'clock, three young men nf our company called at mv lodgiut.'. "Where are you g'ng to-day f they inquired. To church," I replied. "Wo have been teu week at sea; our health re quires cxercifo. Let us walk out luduy, and goto hurch next habbath," they replied. Si id I, "you can go where you dense, hut I 'II gn tn chinch ; the lust woid I heard from my father were, ' Remember Mm Sabbath day ; ' and had I no respect for the Fourth Commandment, I Imvo no. vet forgotten hi lust advice." They went to the fields; I wcnl tollmchureh; they spoilt forty or fifty cent iu the Invorn ! I put one penny bit in the plate, iutlm morning, iifternoou mid ui;.:lii service; total, threo pence. Tin y continued going into the connhy, mid in pen cess of lime the landlady' daughter nnd the landlady 'n niece would join their company. Then each couple hired a gig, at two dollars u day ; wine, cake and ice cream on the road, filly cent each time; dinner nt Jamaica one dollar each. They got homo at eight o'clock p. in., half drunk and having been i niiyht in a Ihiliider oliower, their coals, hats and mantles were damaged fifty percent. They arose the next tnoriiiutr, at !) o'clock, a. m., wiih Here hendt, sore heart and muddy limit, mid angry eoiiicictieo, he.sidon twelve dollars lighter than when they Htarted. 1 went lo church, rose at o'clock, a. m., bend nounder, heart hght, lioue relieiOicd, conscience quiet, and commenced Mm labor ot Mie week iu peace and plenty. They were alt mechanic; some of theiu could earn twelve dollarn n week. My luisiiieM, thai i,f a wrought nail milker, wan poor; tho cur nail machine had just 1 gnt into operation, which cut down my waL'e to u having. With clone application, 1 could only earn live dollaiK and Ijlty cent per week. Never mind at the end of Mie year, my Sabbuih ridiiig fdiinmalo had fine coal, line hat, powdered henduii.l ru tiled shirts ; but I had one hundred hard dollar piled iu ihe corner of my chest. Having lived fas'. Miey died early. Nearly forty winleis are pit muco Iho last was laid in Ihe Toller's, or some nih-r t i -1 I ; while I, hn ing received Iroin my Maker a good conxtituliou, ami common Hciin to talto care id' i',) I am as sound in mind, body and npii jit, a I wa this day fifty-nix years ago, when fust i set my tool on shore nl (inventor wharf. New York; lienide, it is a fart, (lor which my fonily can vouch,) I h ivo been only out dnv conliiietl lo the houo liv sirkiii'M dining thai period. IVow, Mr. I'nnler, t daresay u think, with inc. th it tin church oil Ihe S ibbath in beltiT 'ban tho tav- ru and liehU lor laboring men. JJolitical. USE OF HOMINY, It i surprising how little i known of thisexcellent, hi ulthy lo..d ; niul what an excellent substitute it h tor lolatoen, dining Mm couiinualiou d the disease aiuoiig them, which renders ome that are fair to tin eye, unfit for food, and all exceedingly dmr. In point of economy n human food, mm bushel of beau or hominy, is equal to ten of potatoes. Hominy, too, is a dith almost a universally liked a potatoes, and at the onih about a Ireely eaten, while ut Ihe north it i seldom seen ; iu fact, it is nn unknown food, except to a low per-unit iu cities. Hy hominy we do not mean a port of con rue meal, hut grain of white com, Ironi which ihe hull and chit, or eye, Im been removed, by moistening nnd pounding in n Wooden niortnr, leaving the grains almost whole, and composed of little else but simch. l hut oficu been sn'nl, not one conk in teu known how hi boil a pnlatoe. We may add mioiher cipher when speaking of tho very simple process of conking hominy. Wo give (lie formula from our own experience, and from inclructioii received iu it land where " hog mid hominy " are well understood : Wti-di slightly iu cold water, and soak twelve hour n tepid, noli water, then boil slowly from three to nix lours, in same water, with plenty moro added from nine In time, wiih great euro tn prevent burning. Dun t stilt while rookine, a licit or hard water will hard en tin corn. So it will pea or beau, green or dry, and rice also. When done add butter and suit; or a better way i to let each one season to suit the tate. II in ty ho oaten with meat m lieti ot vegetables, or with sugar or syrup. It is good hot or eohl, and tho more frequently it i warmed over, like the old fashioned put of " Bean porrliltre hi or bcnn orrlIj;n roU, tl.'iiii pornilgi) best at nine days old," so i hominy il in good alwayn, nod very wholesome, and like lomnloes, only require in lie enteii once or twice to fix the taste in its lavnr. If owing II real fat Caket. Maidl the cold hominy with n rolling pin, nml nihl a tittle Hour nnd milk hatter, no a to make Mm whole thick enough to form into little cakes in the hand, or it may be put upon tho griddle wiih a spoon. Hake brown, eat hot, and declare you never aio anything belter of the batter cake kind. Hominy PwhUuff. I'reparo as for hatter cakei. atltl one egg lo each pint, some whole cinnamon, mi- gar to suit tho taste, und a few raisin, and bake lik lice piidilirit.'. A little butter or chopped suet may be adtifd. tvfrvo hut or cold, with or without sauce. Hominy and lirant 'x eqilut pari of cold bakt d bean and h"ininy together, and heat up, and yen wil have nn excellent dish,. The I'low. THE FUTURE OF CANADA. Louis Josmi apinou, in a recent address to the elector of the Montreal district, ha tho following view upon the dentiny of Cmuiila in connection with the United Slates: "( hir social condition in very analogous to Miat of Mie Atneiicaii, but very d liferent to that of Kugland. Our interest are much greater and iti-.ro numerous in America than in tiuluud. Colonial inferiority cannot and Hhoiild not latt forever. The separation in a que, lion of time. It ha it iudiicriiuiuale time, but it i a inevitable nnd certain un death to nil men. And when wn ai"k ourselves what is better for our descendant tin struggles and the rivalries ol'ditb-rent mitiotialitie. or iheir aggregation iu this beautiful confederation there can be no henitiitimi in the presence of the spectacle which American power nive us, who in already the second among llmctvilized nalioiisid the i aril), nnd who, if she continue (o progress during the next filly year to come, a bbe ban done during the lail hall century, wdl become tho most niiiiieroiiH mid povvoft'id nation of ill civilized race. What pigmies would our children he near nuch colonl statues t Must we allow them tn be exposed to the danger nf an unequal nml unlavorablo contest ? Is it not better tn associate them ton future n glorimm as that which will prevail in a stale so vast that many young men ol tlie present day will see it peopled with .lO.OMll 01)0 ol prosp'Toiii mid nltghleiied luhitntants." Widows have Pipial right with married women Hmtn oh r.tniue'te. Well, lum glad ol it lor Iheir sake! U under il they know it ? Some gentleman " colporteur " oii;.dn to bo sent to tell ton if they don't. They ought to wake up to their privileges; ihev've no timu tu lose, snillling nhout trille. Tho True Flag of last week says: " There i nothing on earth so full of rcHination iho oast and hope tor llio luture, iiolhni'' n Inv able ami so lev int.'. as a voting w it low," Well, I don't know anything about d, but I live in hoiu-s; like to know nil Micro in worth knowing; feel awfully be nighted about some thing; should enter the "School t Design lor Women." only I'm afraid I t-hould al ways he at tho toot ol (ho claws! ltut lo i.'o back to widdern; ihe world would certainly fly oil' it axle- tree without 'em! Iiou't Mm dear, benevolent liitle stall give lessen gratis, in "Ueurliiii: made E;iy," to verdant, rising youu-.' men, embryo pnels, n idled -ed young clergymen, ami civil engineer f Can't they mend gloves, mark h a ml k ere hie I'm, ami write little three-cornered, twislilied, gilt-edged, nweet-sconled billet-doux lo Tout, liichmd and Harry T I never saw widow yet, that wa a fool. Wit comes ot weeping. Fanny Fmin. STATE SECRET SOCIETY FOR THE DISTRIBUTION OF OFFICES HFAD-QUARTER8 AT COLUMBUS BRANCH SOCIKTIKS ALL OVER THE STATE THE LATE REVOLUTION AND MORE RECENT GERY-MANDER ACCOUNTED FORI Living here, in plain sight of the Penitentia ry, wo hnvo frequently iiiquipd of the Guard huw It wa that no few Guards could keep in subjection nn many hundred of donpr-rnic men, whoso physical pow- or, when united, would so vastly preponderate overall the power the Guard could hi ing ugainst them T l ho uniform answer is, that before a conspiracy among the prisoner can bo perfected, some nf them are sure tn ; seek favor hy betraying the rest. This i said to be a univcrKiil fact iu regard tn conspiracies", mid it is very rarely one can bo so perfectly managed that some warning does not leak out, which, if attended to in season, will protect Ihe innocent nml the just. Washington's life, and indeed the cnuse of tho Ko volution itself, wan several times saved hi that way. It is no ordered, in the providence of God, that injustice and crime shall always work to a disadvantage. It i also a notable fact, seen every where iu the history of guilt, that they uniuieiiiioiially innuufacture evidence against them-selves, and are driven by an overruling principle nf Mie moral creation, tn adopt such moan of diverting attention from themselves, as will produce the clenrestcnii vit'tion of guilt. When they most ioi-k tu set the laws of Gup at deliaune, they are most within iho inevitn-bo grnp if those laws. It i almost incredible that a conspiracy should exist anyvvhere in America tn tin-mil the elective franchise, by giving the people a chance to vote only for candidate prepared hy the ordeal of a Stcrct Society. Hut it is not more incredible Mian it wai that a conspiracy should be formed in Homo to MfsuKhonnio C kh.wi, and that iho particular friend nf Ci.saii Huutin, fhould he the man in strik the blow. It is nut more incredible Mrm the Secret Cnbnl firmed in Iho Aiuericnn army, at one lime, tt depone and disgrace WasimkoTon, which enme so near being successful. It is not more incredible than Iho blow by which Ko-hi; iii and the hopes of Hungary were stricken down ; nor more incredible than nmny other iu-itjiiice in hi-tory, where liberty ha been surprised, invoked iu cuuniu:: fiieches.and overthrown In nn country on tho whole face of (ion's footont, ha liberty been uble to survive against the evor reclin ing cupidity nnd corruption of Mmso proft-nsing tn ho it friend, except here in this favored land. Anil our terty l yet but about three-quarter of a century old. Are wo lo travel over imam Mm fame inelan- lioly path Miollen trod by ihe people of the old world? Is human nature every where the same? I there mi place, no refuge, no home for free studs, where per feet liberty and equality is suHicient for men ? Where tiie chance to chome and he c lumen freely lo nil placen of trust mid honor, open the do r wide enough to human nmbilion ami human greed ? Whero still olher uiliivimcc! of midnight orgie mid secret oaths will not be resorted lo, to circumvent and forestall iho free exercise of choice and opinion ? Hut the love of power and of L'i'lil, tire both intialialde passion, fiither of THE CROPS. nth LICE ON FOWLS-MODE OF CURE. Our plan nnd wo have pursued It successfully for several yenr in to keep a box or trough filled with dry ashen in the ben house during the winter, in which Miey can wallow every day if Miey choose, and they will wallow there often and long, and never be troubled with insects of any kind. In summer there i less necessity for making thin provision, for then they usually find enough mellow dirt, which is also a good spneitic, fully to answer the purpose unless the noason is wet, so that the ground 14 iu an unwallowable condition, Sourn Carolina. The prospects of the crop!, h cotinn and corn, nro very hue, Gkohou. The wheat crop is generally in good condition. Corn is promising well. Viam.siA. Tho wheat cmp iu the valley f (he James river I said to he uusurpassi'd, boll) iu quantiiy and quality. Elsewhere it in somewhat damueed by the II y and wotin. 'the oat crop isaliuosta Iniloro nn account of the long drought. North Carolina. -The drought has prevailed lo a very great extent. U ells, springs and streams, here tolore perennial, have gone dry, or neatly no, in mnuy seci ions, urn J all ihe crop are serioinly injured. Nkw okk. Wheal is nearly ready lor the reaper, nnd generally looks well. Corn coming rnpidly forward.Mai.ik. Nn appearance of the pointo rot. Iowa. Wheat harvested, nnd a more abundant bar vot wan never known iu the Slate. Wisconsin1. heal uncommonly fine. In (lie cen tral counties the yield will avera:o about twenty-two hurdle1 the acre, Nn traces of rust and (ho berry is plump, heavy and bright. Harley ami ryo also look well. Oats, however, are rather light, and the corn i said to be backward, l otatoe. so tar, looking well Indiana. The wheat ha been somewhat iojnnd by rust and fly, but the crop on Mm w hole w ill be ful ly equal to the average, Tliirly bushel to Mm acre of tho M ditcrrnnomi, me said to have been yielded 111 some places. Theie has been n long drought, and the corn and potatoes nre much injured by it. this shod. Minsui'Hi. The wheal crop is reported as fum in quality and heavy in yield. The corn crop also promise to bo excellent. Arkansas Never, in the history of Arkansas, ha Mm prospect been better for abundant crop. Vmimont. Oorn late, hut looks well oats abundant potatoes tino hay, short crop, but excellent in quality. Col. Harms, the nhlu Associate Editor of the Ohio Cultivator, Im just returned from n visit among ihe Minmi, though ho nays he due not belong to the iVmmi Trihe. We clip the following paragraph from tho very interesting dotting of his journal, iu the hist Cultivator 1 At Oxford, wo were lortunatn to find another live I'oet, m the person of Mr. C. A. Chnniherlain, 11 cor respondent nl Kastern Magnnines. n well a some Cincinnati papois. We took her residence an the tirst nf a largo circle of calls Wn had purposed of an after- main, but alas for our resolution ! when we broke away from the fascination ot her conversation, the netting sun was just guilding the tree top, and the day wa pent, not lost. A volume of Mrs. C.'s poems is soon tn bo brought out hy Messrs. Ward t Tavlor. of Uin- cinnali, and we are gratified in notice that arrangements for printing the work have been made with our friends of the Watt Journal, who do such things right." Wanted, Tho N. Y. Times, nfter noti cing tlie universal use of extravagant language, in this country, which ha exhausted and rendered common place the strongest adjectives nf Mm English, now used, advertises for moro in the following Rtlo: " Wanted, one thommnd new and vigorous adjectives ol 1110 superlative degree; one hundred lor Mm do. nciiption ol natural scenery; one hundred for political opponent tu nluiio each oilier with; mm hundred of the adulatory sort, for the use of ollice seeker. nod the balance tor household word. None but (hone burst tig with tlm spirit of (he ago need bo utfered. Wo want adjet lives that, applied lo cold will make simple burn in compansou ; npiuied tn heat will make common lire cold ; to beauty, will make a frihtol Venn. Wo want adj"clive of npm e, tint will surround and embiace all cieatiou ; nud of si d, that will leave lightning 11 century behind " We have General Young's voucher for (ho (ruth of the following : One line day, during the last presidential CampaiiTit. Samuel Galloway observed a loafer, two sheels over,' sitting on a street corner in Daylon. Samuel accosted him with, ' Itallier unity day, Moses!' ' Ye zir. 11-H-s-t-y day. ' Kaihor ragged for nn cold a day, liauit youT' 'iei ir, r-:i-t-b-e-r rugged.' 'Ami poor, I dare my?' 'Ye. 7ir, not a eenl to buy nothiii 4 And you are drunk I ' rr. zir, B l-i-'-t-l-e ftponifv ) ' And you aro a Locofocn, of course ' 'No .tree ! 1 niut got so low a that yet ! ' An article iu (ho London New contain the following happy picture of Mr. Clay in delude: " Henry Clay's leportcil speeches purtnkn nf (he neutrality of which ho ever boH'ed in the compromise which were tho principles o hi statesmanship. It needed In see the moistened eye, the quivering lip, the tremulous hands, playing with the spoctacle, and tho movements of Iho tall, lithe fmuie ; it needed lo hear the wonderful variety nt bis tones, and lo have thrilled to Mm exquisile pathoa of Id voice, to understand the power which he exercised over Iho whole mind nf those w ho listened tn him in a silence which seemed a il it could never he broken. Tlm silence has changed now. It is he wlm 1 mute, while every other voice i.i busy in discussing his power and his deeds." Niw Kinii or Paint Watik I.imk and Oil. Water lime (hydraulic cement) mixed w ith nil in ihe name way an Hlake'n ( thin Taint or nny ol the several paints lalely brought into use, ha lately been discovered lo lie equal to any oilier substance used tor painting walls, roofs, iloors, fences, nr hii y other wmk ; winlo p, p.,int of economy, is a one In ei'dit or ten. The dineoverv was accidentally made by Mr. John ll-irod,of Hemp stead, Long l-land. It ban been found siiccosslul 111 very irial, drying quickly and hrmly. Tun MAtsAcnr or Caim. Marct and M:n Comikm- kiv We find the following iu tho Louisville Courier : Wo hnvo teen n letter fr.un an olheer stationed nt Fort Wnehitn, Cherokee Nation, of July 1 1th. which fully confirms tlm iiccouni of the terrible inn suae re of Capt. Marry and his whole command hy the On- mauciie. t;apt, Mnrcy w n out on nn exidor im? e. peditimi up (ed river. The party fought the Indians two days, and nil were killed. 1 lie roiiiinaud conUt .1 nl Cnpl. Marcy, of ,rith Infantry, dipt. Mi Olellen, 1 ino rmguieera, DO men, 4 otucers, j cnixenn -ml .'( teamsters, " ru-.ncR CampaH'N Pai'Mi. Iho London (Rn'tinh) Times will be published u n I'ierco Cnmiiaicn miner until ihe election in November. Hurry up your suli- si Tipiioun; mi is ino paper mai made (he dmcuvery that an Irishman in North Ameitca began to be worth something to the Uritixh arisiocrncy, thotiL-h of 110 ac I'oiini nt home. Such a paper must he n valuable ac quisition to Pierce Locolocuism nnd rreo Trade ! A Maine editor navn that a pumpkin, in that State, grew in Urge that eight men could si and round it. This is like tho man who saw a (lock ol blackbirds so low that be could shake a stick at them. them once allowed tn eturelKli itselt 111 tlie tllosen ro of tho heart, that heart can never more beat wiih pulmiliuhs entirely generous or just. Unite them both in one receptacle, and you can on longer account anything improbable. In the hort ap'ico of our national life we have had au Armii.p, ti Ik1 mi, a Hum.. Wo have had 11 conspiracy among oflicer and soldiers f Ihe Revolution, (o depo-e Wabiiimton. Wo Iiuvo had u Hartford Convftitim, and a more recent Stthvitle Convention. I low more nnd m nre dot it M-ein ihut it I hould ho written all along the sky, in every quarter of Mm horizon, in letters of living fire, that old warn-ing " Eternal vigilance it the price, of liberty." If it shall ever happen that the American people cense to frown with unrelenting and indignant reprobation up on nil such scheme ami contrivances to circumvent the lull and fair play of iheir free iiistiiulions, that time will be tho commencement of nn era of ruin; the precursor of that certain doom which Iiiih fallen like a pall over the high hopes ul tho son nf liberty elsewhere, through all ages nf the World. I'.iit let 11 proceed In the t'UOOK OF TUB EXISTENCE OF A CONSI'lllACY. Tlm evidence Ins iiccumulnteil so rapidly within the last few weeks, and has become no voluminous, Mmt in order to condeiHe it within the space uf a newspaper article, wo must select ul discretion from Ihe mam ly ing before us, In Iho first place, wo call attention to it pub'icaliou appearing some weeks ago in the Sonpa-nil, a neutral Ciucinunli paper, from which wo extract Mm pilhol Iho Btnry. It commenced us follows: To the Democracy of Hamilton County. The uinliTiiiMn tl Imvifiu lux n iiiiuIh (ally cauntnteil with llio exlmenre nl s irrrtt fM)itinl nr a ant: at ii'H in lln cainly, We lit-1 it our Ixaiteli 11 duty, n mmtiher Hint nitn'erelri)'tifel the Pern-otTMic. pHrty. to Ishe thin pntili! mcilieil nf e)qiiiiii(i (lie active lnHianli.m ol sutl) n plot il una il Din vitality nl tlie rule (it Hie penol". In thus perlnrinlni; ivloit we ii rei-ivr to Iw our sscn il duly, WA exjioct tlmt Hut Illy rry tlist we nre ilritrnf tti( tlw Denmcrntic p'tftjr, will Im rniiH'tl ly llioie who Imvn n win. It mo- 111 nam tie hi tic lo utille iiKiiurv. loeiCHie llie rerimn pun- itliineat tlmt will lu tm-teil nut to them ly a psrty JchIoum ot iu lutefirily. They spoke n Democrats and member id' the parly, iu pursuance of what Miey profes tn consider a "sacred duty." Ttiey anticipate nbuie from those interested, but think, iiaiuralty, that none but those who hnvo a selfish motive will blame them. They did not seem to Im aware how deeply and generally their parly nil over tho State wa involved in the matter, and were simple enough tu ex ect help in ihe work id' purification. They sny in relation lo (heir mean of information : Thn Infermstlun which we prnpos Inipnrt lo thfi piilillr Wdi clr rlve.l Irani severitl mi niheri nl llie soeieiy ol wiilcn we ppenk, wltufe rhsrsi tfrs hs gentlemen ol vorm itj Ii ui)iiioti(nn- hie. They then go mi tn state TIIE CONTINUANCE AND OBJECT OF THE S( ICIIM'Y. We ( lisrve thst this tm lf-ly lint continued tn exlutfnre up to this tune, unieoa in meiiiDers liiive nu been irltilciiiHl wny williin Hie im ween : mm in ii)efTini;i nre in serrei, lis nielli tiers regiilnrly inllinteit nnd bnutal by nn uliliipitiua lu keep se cret lln hi i stnl rxUlrnrn. Witclmrite, Unit lliu)ili tlm prenmMntn its can nil tut Ion very meuYtly linuiis ilisl iti nhjert in In " punly Ihn Dcmncrslic pnr-ly " itml llie !" slm id Un netterp up nnd mnnsiieri Is, nnd hns iH'en, ta cimiroi itie nominal ions 01 llie imrtr ny 111 secret uaiat- Mtcn nf twn Inuiitreit ini'intiots, n irefentiii(( tlm wants mid lownnaum ol lliti rniiniy. v. Im nre Iinileraliieu tn lie liiuiinl In ma1 nil llieir etalenver lo neiue llie miccmh e.t llie ticket tiiHtitnntril ty Din fociety, when llie dainty C'Liivenhun hnll mul. They do (lot pretend to give the names uf more thai tl few of ils members, hut n few they do give as fol lows : We chftrRe thst th fnllowlnp nnim 1 perrnnt sr, orrtr, sr- Ilvn mill etieruellc ini'tlUnTS Ol Hie Merli IV ' WNIIIItiiiletl nil I. nun, Joi-i)i (oti)rr, Kit wnr l (.'. Itoll, hrlMr)ier rnntshle, noun rixti, j"eili nam, . 11. w. Mi-l.enn, llenrv ItiHillnr. w r. Johiuen, Hnnri l.inck, . J, Wettver, Jehu I.hwiIimi, t.t wmil M. flnelil, Jesie Tiiuanua. We now hasten to the close of the document : We have nnw performed nnr duly hy ftfvlng ihe fwta of the recpnl enlitcnre nl thli itntiuerin pnliticid or until? hiiom ; will llie (Ii nmcrm y iertini tlirirs t ll they do, lliere will anon tie n iretiil rnldaiirent hnd rulit'DIi," nnd die dt iiiacmlic iiulse will DC4I truer mm niroiii-r tor inr piinmumin. l iitil the iilixDuim nl tair rlinmrn in ilniieil, nuthiullnttrely snu wilhnilt eiiuivi.cnnon, nn in inn pH, thu uaiuea el tininmitn will not lie iiuhlicly nicnll'ineO. tliti. fiiiFt, 'I'mtiTHV H. TV, J. W.HMlTU, HaMITKI. KlItlDMK, N. A. Hkitt, Ham'l V. Ciihwin, It. K. Ciix, Wm. Mii t K. JnllN IhiWAnn, l)vil WiilTK, TllUMA HllKfl.uCk. Iheiuselve by an act declaring moro emphatically than any words could do, the infamy and shame charged upon them! They knew it could not stand tho light. They knew it would be overwhelmed by an immediate and terrible popular indignation, and lied like guilty wretches from it defence. Such, then, wa the fact ns to the existence of the society. Such wo the evidence of its character. Now look back and note the mimes of those belonging to it. You observe among others the names of Washington McLean, EnwAttn 0. Roll, Dusj Piatt, Jacou Flinn and William F. Johnson. This Edward C. Bull is the nntne who guve the pretended certificates tn Geo rok E. I'ugh and Wh. F. Johnson, to enable them in defiance of law tn claim seat in the Legislature, and thus disorganized that body fur two nticcoMsivo sessions. This William F. Johnson is the sume Johsson who so lung disorganized tlm State Seiiuto, under pretence of a certificate from this same Itoix. PtioH is now Attorney General, but how much agency that society had in hi elevation is not known; tho society, however, is known to have existed for a considerable length of time. It in proba ble that tho unexpected, violent and unheard of proceedings, ending iu Locnfoco ascendancy hy mean of the Hamilton county certificates, were concocted in this or similar secret societies. IS THERE A PARENT STATE SOCIETY, WITH BRANCHES IN ALL THE COUNTIES? If the party iu other part of the State nre not in. olved in the matter, they would unquestionably de nounce it. They have so apportioned the State that Hamilton county holds the balance of power iu that party. A necret, nworn cabal, In circumvent tho elec tive franchise in that county, would not be submitted tn by other parts nf Ihe State if the lenders all over the Slate were not in il. They would have come to the rescue of Fries and Day, and the hold men who under-took iho exposure, and have sustaiued them iu a mnu- ner to tcHch ihe conspirators a lesson. Instead of this they attack Fkiks and Day. If a single Demociatic paper bribe State has supfiorted them we have not noticed it. Ailack are plenty and bitter. What due this prove? Itppneitat lent (tint the leader of Mm party do not look upon such cabals an reprehensible, and it makes it probable that most of them nre ami- nectt tl with some nuch secret society. In reply to one of lheo attacks from the Statrtman, Dr. Fries wrote to that paper, among other things, the following " I think it prol mti In tli nt ynu (trend n perfect development ot Itiia M't'i'ft puluicHl soclrly hul liens, u It m icy resell a pan nt 010 : Hiai 1 hiinw ot nu uiii! iiiurti likely in be at its homl Hutu llie jathrr ut (-(irruption. " I liinm you will not delay In llie production of ymir exposure. Ami 11 thin IhiiiIit invnln-i llie repulnlioit ot tlm tilh ul Jutiunry 1 iiiiTrian.n, i none me m mucrnlie rren til luii ! n e WU ifive thin nnllee ptihln iiy, in tinier Hint the truth nr Islnity ot your ttmr lnlmiHliou HL'niost the Integrity ut its int'iiibers limy he tully mijiurcu mm." What does tho Statrtman say to the chnt ge that there l n parent society ? Ho begins thus: A Pretty Husb kicked up by a Trickster. The tiilliiwitm article, Irani "lieiaue l-rli-i." wii huuilett us tew iImyh since, liy Andrew Jiicktun Mnrusti. who. mi hsinllnu it to ih. uitido ihe in'ciNcary nuilnf;y lor so dultiK, lor WU tlu nut ' perniit im n (n Iminl iimnich utttcka with impuniiy. 1 We iulii(ih it tnr the purpoae (if exumiiift lo llie IVniucrary of the Male, I he true clin meter uf a outiteii)i KjIh nctiundrel, uho.t.y link, Irsud mid dereptiiiii, wnrkitl lumsell upiai the I iiainM-mtlc Mntti t'eutrnl I'oinmitlee, t.y first Bitling iiiUi the; Chnir li lapurarily, nl Ihe tfth til Jtuiunry Cuiivtntion. Hut Ihe Satcitnan nu where denied the existence of tho " i'akknt seem r." The idea of Ins article seemed tn he that no one known to bo a man who would ex pose such a society, could have got on the State Com tuition without trit kery ; and that lo show that Fiuta wa 11 man tu make nuch exponurcs, was lo "expose to the Democracy cf the State the true character of a con- tcvtftible teountlrrl, I his was the guilt of Frikh; he lied exposed the exinteure of a society, known to bp so liehiiiou Hint lis members daro not defend 11, but openly nml suddenly notion need that itwna abandoned 111 order to save themselves, as noon as it wns 01 posed. We repeat, that ihe Statttman do more denied the ex istence uf a parent Slate society than it or others did llie existence of ihe society in Cincinnati, and it abused Dr. Frik just as liny abused him. Supposing tho nhociico nl denial of iho Editor might possibly be iu-advertunt wo again called his attention to it as fol lows : Secret Society State Society and Branches. Dr. fr'niF.?, iu faia letter lo lh MuUjmiimii, luhlithetl a lew weeha since, ssyat They now divide it themselves, and Mr. Roll in ia the van to represent part uf it. The motive and manner of the present division, Mr. Koemelin has above stated. Dot tn the Secret Society. In addition to the evi dences cited, frequent statements have appeared charg ing it to exist all over the Stale. Our article is already too long to admit of further quotations. No denial has ai'PEarkd. Mr. Roll, one of the prominent member of the Hamilton Society, is now before the people in his district, by a regular nomination, for Congress. Not a Locnfoco prens in the State ha disapproved of the nomination. That sort nf a society is tol erated and approved by the party at large, and those belonging to it promoted to the highest places. Au end must be put to such proceedings at once and forever, or freedom is a farce. The life of Hull was mercifully spared, but he never had tlie hardihood to show his face before the American people on a candidate for olHce. The members of the Hartford Conven tion shrunk into private life. Burr, with all bis au. dncity, uever, after his acquittal, dared ask for popular approbation. If one whole party is now so hopelessly corrupt that no voice of protestation is raised by its pre, we thank God it is not so with all parties. There is yet virtue enough in a free press not ouly to expose the rot ton counsels of the rot leu clan which beleaguer the Male, but tu lash, tho rascals naked round the world. The thing has slept long enough ; tlie Demo cratic press is silent, and so far as their aid is concern ed, the elective franchise may be trodden underfoot. We call upon the Wing press to perform its duty. Suico writing the abovo, another startling fact has corao to light: I'bddatk Jcdoe It. O. llammnnd, Fun., liaa received tho &d- pniiitnmiit of l'nibnte Judjin lor Hammit county, in place of C. (1. 1. add, decesjed. This appointment took many hy surprise, parlirultirly sn it wu generally ktiuwn thst linn. L. Swill wns mi applicant for Ihe oil ice, and had lieen premised the appointment (n his Irfeiidn say) hy (lev, Wood, aome time before Mr. death, iu exnectalioa ul inch an event. There Is 101116 hard thlk nhout it, Himnii; iijuads tit thu " laltblul," hut the protulality is, innt tney win conclude, to " prlii and bear II." It wm rulber hard lor such an old eourser as Mr. U. to ho outstripped by such a sg Summit iieacon. After knowing the facta about this Secret Society btiKiness, it is easy to account for tho numerous movements before regaided so mysterious andunaccountable. 1 think It jiMihnhltt tlmt ynu drestl s perfect development ot till neeret political fnciely Inmiiiem, an It nmy reach a jmrcnt mr ! and I know ol no one mure likclv to to si Hi head timu iho jnuar 01 rurrupuen. 1 nmc von win imi tiemy in inn proauctinn 01 vniir cynosure. Ami nn I lit 4 tWndcr iovulTii the rrimlatifin ot Ihn Ptli ol Jnnunrv Cia.v. nlion, I hupe Ihe th moerHlin -preta nf ihe Male will eive tliit notice pul'liuty, in order ihnt the tniih or tnlmiy 01 your lane iiiitiiiHiin Rgnuial tlie inl. j-tity ut im ineuibera limy he iuiij iniuireu ouo. I'lcace "I'servo that thin i not an aiionyu otn charg It is si;; nod by ELEVEN responsible men. (hie of these is Hon. Okoruk KtdKn, formerly, we believe, n member of Congress, Mid now a niemberof the Lnc loco Siato Central Committee. Atmlhcr of these is TiM'iTiir C. Day, formerly one of tho editor of the t'inciaruifi Enuiier, more receutlj known unthe nuthor of a seriea of interesting travel in Europe. There an other iiaiiien itutong lln 111 known and respected, hut we must abbreviate. What reception did Miey moe with ? Tin y were shut out from their own parly pit' per hi that city, ami obliged to hnd a hearing 11 neutral paper. Mr. Day wa not allowed to mak statement in iho minor he had sorecenllynlited. Mr. Khiw was not allowed to upenk in tin papers of lie party of whose State Ccnlial Cnmmilleo he was member. The charge was then hi-mighl before th Lncofoco Central Committee for Hamilton county, and a motion teat made to appoint tt commit tie to inveititjatf the truth of the matter. THIS MOTION WAS VI ITE DOWN ! But from that day to tbi the existence o iho society, nud il charm ter, ha not been serious! denied. Il turned out Mint the editors of both of th Loenhico paper iu Cincinliaii were members; Mint mnjnrity of the county committee were member or its interests, and (hey were-nil in a blare of indignation at iho eXiMisure. Such rnr.o, such epithets, such abuse ns they heaped upon Messrs. Fmita and Dr, ami Ihe others, for that act of simple, common honesty, is nel tlom seen this side uf Tophel. They acted moro like devils in torment thnn like rational men, butAry did not and dare not deny the facta ! They professed to give up immediately their organisation, declared it to have been abandoned, and thus acknowledged its uij us tillable and guilty character I Thus they sought to save la reply to this intimation, tho editor of the Sinltiman abuses Dr. r'siK, hut intimates no denial of iho uxlittaice uf a "parent society, lln fays, anions; other thitiRi We have in our nosiennon the riir correinundenre of n tr rrrt rnbnl, eetileied in tliU rllv. Iat Winter, lo oiienUi niion the Uienibi-ri (il the l.eiiinlnliire nnd tu Ret a 11 nieetlmri, which failed niter the Athinnil nnd Mntiilield stlnir, no Ur n the puMic nnvt- inxn were roiiceinea. ine wmao tiiinv la very run ilecltlmlly , nml proven inoie I linn tbin hrls would desire Di een peibaps lllllll. Very well) Now, let as bare this written evitlenee, llie Statatnan cot tain ly does not withhold it on Dr. Fairs' account. became lie li willing: enouili to denounce him. Why not, then, Monni tlie wbnlu catislt Who is In ttf How pinny ol the pre. ent l.orolurn Mlatfl ticket! Wns the presnnt Locoloco llckot Itrst conrocted or unt in that nerret cahal t Why su much pains keeptlarkt Let Ihe public have the evidence.. They know that the public butlneti has been hnairlully mimaiiBf(fd; It It baa Uvn done thrniiuh the iolluence of s ferret society uf Lo- roloco politician, let that be kn To this no denial ur explanation lias ever been seen in the Siatesman or any other Locnfoco paper, to the bent of our knowledge ur belief. If any such has ap peared wo would be glad tn see it. They are as silent as the grave. Fire cannot melt a denial out of tin in, or if they are now driven to mako it, it is loo late. They have been silent under the charge too long. It will not do to pretend that the charge is of no conse lucncii. Dr. Fhih wan temporary Chairman of tin State Convention, and is now a member of their Shite Central Committee. There in no refuge but in denial or silence, and silence is confession. Hut ihe pnmf does not end here. It is known that some very strati go appointments have been made by the Governor. Mr. HtF.MKi.iN, a member of the late otihliiutimml convention, andn prominent man among the democracy, slates how one of thein happened. We take a poi iioti of one of his statement, made over hi own niguntiire in the Cincinnati Nonpareil Throughout lat win Or many things, exneeialty the acts of the b'Kidn(io, produced a deep-fen ted dlnanildarllon wiih Ihn Mate ol nor puh'ie art mm. All honeit democrats lelt " That thcro w at HoinctliinK rotten In Denmark." 'I he creation nl tlm Criminal Court, with n direct view tn Joint certain imtorious mdlvnlual Inlotillice, ninrtled tbupiihlle. Mr, linn ilclented that by htiltinir anal nut Ihn boiler.. 'Iho uuhllc were next fin prit it to learn Ihe mljtnallnn of Warden, un the niUiaai. limt Hint snnrie ntiliviiluai ilcienleil liy f lion lor tlie iimiinl Ciairt, mull! hnvea place. Waih Mr lrfau,lbe intended t-ti'Mor ol (oivenior Wood, was the " so tM-lween" to the liuv- crimr lor Warden. 't he iititlersiuned happened tn be In the Onvemor's office, suiiniai at the rciiicni ol ilm (iavernor, Ihe iinnu n of persona miikloK an aiipHcaiion lur pardon, when, nhout Ii! o'clock, Wash Mcl.eno arrtvcti mere, jmi iroin Ibe ran llie (iavernor retire with Md.enn a lew iniunlei, not exceeding, live, and that alii iinoii, the pul'llc learned in the streets tit I 'olniubun. ihe reilitn- lnii 01 v artien, ana tun appointment ut rinit. and tlie neniili :iiit-iunail, tead in Ihe nxt dny'n telegraphic delpati:bcn, Hid no Hsiuuiidinu uiaviusure. Rend with enro how this appointment was fixed "five minutes" between (ho Governor and Wash McLean. This Wan I en is the editor of one of the lo cnfoco papers of Cincinnati, and an acknowledged member of the secret society. Wash Mcl.cnu, the go-lietween was a member. Dunn Piatt, Iho bji poiutco was a meniDer, It was fixed up, Mr. Iteeme- lin says, in five minutes, while he sat in the sntne buil ing, a very prominent democrat from Ilm same conn ly, nud wns not consulted. Timy retired fuun hi pre sence! it was a matter of secrecy, atid the people nf Cincinnati rend in the telegraphic despatches the news ! of that " a(ttmdij?" npin intnient. If the (iovortmr is not a member of thu parent society that fact ought to be known. It ought In he known why an iintmrtniit Judicial appointment wn made with such secrecy and hurry even from memheis nf hi own party, nud why Mm ermine wa thrown upon the shoulder of a man whose nppnintinetit to nuch an ollice excited universal luloninhmeiit. It in not exactly germain to the (epic ill bund, but exhibit loeo-fneoism it, alight su like itself that we cannot forbear In publish another portion ul Mr. Iteemelin's card : The Hpiiortlontiient nl Hamilton county Into two Cuitsrettltin-nl di-Dlcta, wan ilrslled by Adam N. Hidille, llie hmlhet -in-law nt K, Kelt, with 11 direct purpene, to so ihsfw ibe dinirb tn, ns to acccnilih the lollnwin ut-cta: I. 'looinke Ibens'lein duliii-t utronf enough In carry Mr. Kiddle In If.'d, "in pile ul llie I'mlmlicn." J. To mnke Ibe Wenleru trmk rin-iudl, Sn snto turnidji Mr. (toll mid hii Irieiida Ihe only electioiteeriiifi hubby tlu-v hnd a?aliint me, and that wnn, that ihe dcuiocrncy ol Ihe dimrii t daretl ma nnininate tne, bfcui ieii;ioun pn judken were lo hit uxliIikI nniimt 11111. niter llie enniiresnionni npporooninem nan pnsnctl, and in Inrt tetom it, I slated IU pi I vale cetive irnllen tu many demur rail, ihe lii'larioils iiiT(ioies, anil inn treanuli Contemplated by one ut Ihe tialtora ot IMU. Many weitt d!nned tn dlnpate thrm, hut as the canvass dnvel uped tticlf, the (i-nlea let! Irian the eye ul all impaiuai mid lioti-ent men, and the ibiiig is now nbvleun to all. This wan the bill jmacd by the majority. Mr. Roll wnn horror-stricken because theconuty was divided by the whips n few years ago ; and a revolution was got up RIVER AND HARBOR IMPROVEMENTS. On almost every subject now before the peo ple for their decision iu the coming Presidential elec tion, ihe Locofocos show two faces, either northern and aunt hern, or eastern and western, as circumstances may require. On the slavery question, they have a northern and a southern face. In this State, especially in the uorlheni part, several papers are supporting Pi erci because of his anti slavery speeches, j-iferring from them that his election will be a positive victory for those holding lluise views. In some points in the southern Slates, hi election is urged on the ground that he is an old and decided pro-sin very man, nud unequivocally in favor of Mm linality of (he compromise. On (ho River and Harbor bill (hey (urn their imngo partly around, causing one face lo look east and the other west. Iu their plutform they took special pain to form an easy pivot on which tu make Micro revolutions. Their resolution 011 this point rends a fullows : Nf wired, Thst the Constitution duea not confer upon the Gen eral Huverninenl die power tu commence and carry nti a Gen eral r-ytin nt Harbor Improvement, and thnl wh are opposed aucu a policy. Here it will ho seen that under the phrase, " geuer- al system," Miey are at liberty tn go either against the hole system, or in favor of a partial system, as the pe- uliar location inifdit require. This feature of their platform has already been seized upon and madeavailable. On one side, tho Sandutky Democrat and Cleveland Plain Dealer deny that the Democratic party were over opposed tn River and Harbor Improvements, and oldiy ussert that nil appropriations heretofore made for these objects have been made by the Democrat party. They even claim that the Democrats were the exclusive Iriouds ()f the River und Harbor bill that lately passed the House. Their boldness and recklessness in this case aro more to be admired than their veracity. Of (he 103 vutes in favor of the bill, 58 were Wing, 41 were Democrats and Freesuil, Of the 75 votes against it, 12 wero Whigs and (13 were Demo crats. Absent, 17 Wbiga and HC Democrats, and 1 Freesuil. And yet, the Buffalo Courier says "this is a Democratic measure, maintained by Democrats, and paued by a Democratic majority in the Home of Repreten taiicet!" Democratic measure! with 99 Democrats ither voting against it or dodging it, and only 41 vo ting for it! Five-sixths of all the Whigs voted fur it. while a largo and decisive majority of the Democratic members voted against it I Yet those Democrats who voted for it and those who voted against it can all stand iu loving brotherhood on the plank of the platform quo-led above, und both appeal tu it an a basin for their ac tion. So much for Ihe veracity and sincerity of these northern papers who assert that the Democratic party tire now or ever have been tho friends of River and Hut hor Improvements. Not one third of the Demo cratic members in Congress voted for tho bill, and yet it is railed a Democratic measure! Five-sixths of all the Whigs voted for it, and yet the Whigs ate reported by these papers as doing their best to defeat it ! That will puss. Impudence und hypocrisy can do no more. But what sny the other side those wlm worship tlie olher face of this Locoloco image? The Richmond Examiner, representing the inflexible Democracy uf the Old Dominion, speaks thus of this same bill: Thii hill ti the fint ot tho sort that has been rained lor a Inn it time, and il wilt be the latt for fur notri si It ait. Kranklm i'kree will come Into power ob lb 4lh of next Much. Aitrfet eonntrnedon ami mjicct lor the Onititution is the Medeen law 01 meuemucrniiR iiartv. aim sir. fierce, ben des that annrraJ reaion, m bound irrry idta of rantuttney, and mry fact of ni jmih rarrrr, 111 rem mrji oik iic tm; it will Do it, II Ihey aro lime nicu 10 nun, juit in mmy aa mere is a tun in tne iky. That sound like a notefiom another instrument- one not tuned tu the samo key as thai upon which our Sandusky, Cleveland, und Buffalo friends have pitched iheir Democratic organs. Nor does it sound alone a whole choir of southern Locoloco instruments pour forth their notes in perfect unison with it. As a sample, hike the following from the&muinaA Georgian, which, after publishing the vote of the House on this bill, exclaims: "Look at that Hit t On one able, tn favor id the mramrn vnn will nee all ihe northern votes, with Ihe exception ot a few ever -.muni nnu unwr imi-iuur u-iouie nonorea nnrinern uemocrain. Annum theio Innt our eve reata with inexiirenaibla tileaiun. mm.. Ihe name ut Hurry Hibbard, of New llampihire, and the friend ot Franklin I'inrcn, and, we believe, the rpteeiitatlc of bli dis-ti let. A little lower down la that of "caalc, another Grand Stale iMuocrst. With H'bhard, Peaitee, and Jaekion, ntnnd nearly every uemacratic meuiber ol Uongresi from the noutb. ' These "never-ttm-much-honored Northern Demo crats" referred to, nit voted against the bill 1 and the fict that Hahry HinBARD, of New Hampshire, "the friend nf 1-ranklin Picrcb, voted aaint tl, is sig nificant, lie does not voto thus without reason. He knows he stands as the index of Pikhci's wishes and intentions, and he votes iu accordance with those wish es and intention, if nut iu actual compliance with hi request. Thus stand Ihe facta, and thus stand (he professions ol the two winp of the Locnfoco party on this impor tant sui'ject. 1 he people can see them, and can read for themselves, and will put Ihe right interpretation on tlm new-horn xeal of a few Northern Locnfoco pi per in lavor of river and harbor improvements. Iu contrast wiiii iliis double-faced, meaningless resolution of the Lncofoco Convent inn, wn place the following resolution of (he Whig Convention on the 1 11 tne sub ject. It snv what it meant, and it means what it says: The conitilullnn vcata in TonRrein the power to open and repair Inn horn, and lemtm- uhai ructions from navignble rivers; and it in exiedient that CoiirrM ntmuld rxercine that power, Mmr axrA mmttrtmint arr nrerv for 1A1 common S, tru. t- or lor tho protet lain and facility ol coimiieree with forrln na-tloiin ur mnoiiK the Platen; such improvements buiuu, in every imuoce, unliounl and Heiiernl In their chancier. PROBATE COURT. It is proper lo stnle we never understood from any mm that Judge Batkb md decided against tho right nl' Mm Probata Court in take mgnixance of that chis of cases which, by the cotislituiiou, do not require an indictment by a grand jury, and we nerer made any attrrtivn that he had to decided. It wns lint at all within tlie n oie nl his duty to make any derision, pro nr con, un that subject. In no sense was It Ho only di i iilnl llml he liml un jiirlmlictimi, in whic h Im i. fully ii.liiiui'd by llio UWilm.iu. nml tlm publUh- l li lli r Ml Atliirney (irui'ral 1'uiih. It tlinn. nud i yet our niiiiimi limt llio I'mUto Court hail no juri.. dic tion, or miliiT. .mlnii could not net, in nnj .cmia to rtiiurre uio wiomy ot tho low, until lliu l.i.giilnture, fiylM, ire.c:ribi'd tho mctnn.rof tfiliiiff. llio Mi'imnii, nud the mat of innnkiud. will nlnmn hew Ihi. in niiiiil. Our lnii(!un(;i) will brar no olher iMii.triicliuu williuiit viuli'iicn, nml ws k;oa il nuvcir intended Ut heur nny oilier. Woknow llieu, ju.l in well ni wo do new, thnl .Iwlgo Utk liml no pnwsr to bv nny ouiii on tin, ulijecl. Iledrow the inference, and liy it wo .land. to net the law naida, which wa. partially iucoe..fuL lucky. C. M. Clay is very sick at Whitehall, Kon-